Peter Jones

Ancient & modern

A classicist draws on ancient wisdom to illuminate contemporary follies

issue 17 January 2004

The Tory leader Michael Howard has published a list of his ‘beliefs’. If this was a political move, Athenians would have found it baffling.

The 5th-century bc thinker Protagoras defined ‘excellence’ as ‘proper management of one’s own business … and of the city’s too, so that one can make the most effective contribution to its affairs both as a speaker and man of action’. Socrates interjected, ‘I assume you are describing the art of politics and promising to make men good citizens.’ Protagoras agreed that was exactly what he had in mind.

To us it is surely an extraordinary idea that one of the main duties of the politician was to make men ‘good citizens’. But ancient Athens was a different world, never more so than in its political arrangements. It was, of course, a direct, participatory democracy, in which all political decisions were taken by the vote of male citizens over the age of 18, meeting in Assembly once every eight days.

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