About This Book
The work offers two comparative accounts of Greek civic systems. The first defends the democratic city's choice of open speech, broad eligibility for office, and popular courts, arguing that empowering poorer classes and allowing wide participation preserves freedom and balances elite interests despite imperfect legislation. The second outlines the Lacedaemonian constitution attributed to Lycurgus, describing rigorous public education, communal discipline, military training, and legal customs that structure citizens' lives from birth to old age. Throughout, the author analyzes how institutional designs aim to secure social order, civic cohesion, and the survival of each regime.
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