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    In a democracy, the right to rule is created by those who... — Carmelics
    Home/Democracy & Governance
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    Supports→The political authority of a democratic assembly is entailed by an account of the conditions under which citizens may legitimately exercise coercive power over one another.

    In a democracy, the right to rule is created by those who are ruled.

    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract
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    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract

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    Democratic authority therefore derives from the very conditions that license mut...The political authority of a democratic assembly is entailed by an account of th...There is no sharp division between 'binders' and 'bound' in a democracy.

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    Therefore, democratic authority rests on the consent of those subject ...81%The right of the state is essentially constituted and limited by the p...81%The right of the state is constituted and limited by the power of the ...81%Grounding legitimate authority in representative consent of the govern...79%

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    Simmons (2001) criticizes Rawls’ approach for mistakenly blurring the distinction between justifying the state and political legitimacy (see also section 2.3.). A Rawlsian could reply, however, that the problem of legitimacy centrally involves the justification of coercion and that legitimacy should thus be understood as what creates—rather than merely justifies—political authority. The following thought supports this claim. Rawls—in Political Liberalism—explicitly focuses on the democratic cont

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