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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    The people must be kept in fear through punishment, but p... — Carmelics
    Home/Justice & Punishment
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    Challenges→Despotic governments are inherently self-corrupting and unstable.

    The people must be kept in fear through punishment, but punishments must escalate over time until threats lose their force.

    Democracy & GovernanceJustice & Punishment
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    Justice & PunishmentDemocracy & Governance

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    Social Contract5 linked

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    Virtue Ethics
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    Despotic governments are inherently self-corrupting and unstable.In the despot's absence, intrigues multiply because the rule is odious to subjec...Property is not secure in a despotic state, so commerce will not flourish and th...The despot becomes lazy, voluptuous, and ignorant, and delegates actual governan...
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    The despot cannot rely on his army, because the more power generals have, the gr...The despot's character prevents effective rule: since every whim is granted, the...

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    Living in fear of punishment constitutes a form of distress.77%The people desire ranks and emoluments and fear punishments and penalt...76%Most people will resort to crime when faced with hunger and fear.75%Legal punishment is more dramatically coercive and burdensome than oth...74%

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    AI-extracted
    SEP: montesquieu
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    Montesquieu writes that "the principle of despotic government is subject to a continual corruption, because it is even in its nature corrupt" (SL 8.10). This is true in several senses. First, despotic governments undermine themselves. Because property is not secure in a despotic state, commerce will not flourish, and the state will be poor. The people must be kept in a state of fear by the threat of punishment; however, over time the punishments needed to keep them in line will tend to become mo

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