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    A state is 'absolute' to the extent that it incorporates ... — Carmelics
    Home/Democracy & Governance
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    Supports→Aristocracies are likely to be more absolute than monarchies

    A state is 'absolute' to the extent that it incorporates the rights of all its members and minimizes the basis for dissent

    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract
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    Aristocracies are likely to be more absolute than monarchiesThere are generally more checks on authority in aristocracies than in monarchiesThere is a greater diffusion of political power in aristocracies than in monarch...

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    For Hobbes, sovereign legislative authority is nearly absolute and not...78%The right of the state is essentially constituted and limited by the p...76%A state can be regarded as truly organised only when the universal is ...76%Aristocracies are more absolute than monarchies75%

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    Given that there will generally be more checks on authority and a greater diffusion of political power in aristocracies than in monarchies, we should not find it surprising that Spinoza claims that aristocracies are likely to be more absolute than monarchies (8/7), since a state is “absolute” to the extent that it incorporates the rights of all its members and minimizes the basis for dissent (8/3, 8/4, 8/7; Steinberg 2018b). Absoluteness thus indicates a norm very much like peace, the cardinal

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