Bear in mind that democracy and nationalism were quite entangled in the nineteenth century, when most of Europe's democracies emerged - the notion of getting rid of kings went hand in hand with an ideal community which was, by and large, homogeneous. It's not difficult to imagine that people who wanted France, Italy, Germany or wherever to be culturally and ethnically uniform would have had little trouble translating that logic to political beliefs.
That said, 'pluralism' may well be a relative term: yes, the level of political diversity in the Roman senate was markedly smaller than the diversity in 1945's House of Commons, but that didn't mean that there were no ideological conflicts, quite the reverse. Minority representation only forbids pluralism in those issues which unite the minority in question. Obviously, if only men are allowed to vote, then there are unlikely to be strong groups in Parliament supporting the interests of women, but there could be a great variation in beliefs reflecting the interests of different sub-groups of men.
As for Liberia, was it not founded as a place to send liberated slaves, much like Israel was founded as Jewish homeland? It also seems as if this constitutional relic is far from unconditionally accepted in Liberia.
This doesn't change the fact that Pluralism did not exist as a cultural idea in the modern sense, nor was it considered important. In ancient Rome and the United States, factions were outright looked down upon as a bad thing. In France, the predominant idea was the 'general will', not a diversity of opinion.
This doesn't change the fact that Pluralism did not exist as a cultural idea in the modern sense, nor was it considered important. In ancient Rome and the United States, factions were outright looked down upon as a bad thing. In France, the predominant idea was the 'general will', not a diversity of opinion.
This doesn't change the fact that Pluralism did not exist as a cultural idea in the modern sense, nor was it considered important. In ancient Rome and the United States, factions were outright looked down upon as a bad thing. In France, the predominant idea was the 'general will', not a diversity of opinion.
Let's examine that. When were all men allowed to vote? How about women? When were seats apportioned fairly? When did the House of Lords cease to be a playground of the hereditary peers? &etc. We can go on. But let's not kid ourselves, early democracies were not interested in pluralism.
How about actually defend your comments rather than dismiss all criticism
But let's not kid ourselves, early democracies were not interested in pluralism.
Kaiserguard said:Simple majority rule is naïve democracy, or populist democracy... The larger the majorities involved, the more political pluralism is allowed, the more democratic a country is.