CHAPTER
ONE
VIEWS
OF PHILOSOPHERS THROUGH THE AGES
Perhaps
what has become so dominant in the affairs and the nature of man, almost
exclusively, is the need to be treated well. What seemed as latent but
constantly boiling in every individual of all ages is a quest to get a fair
share of one’s natural entitlement. In other words, man searches for justice.
Philosophers through the ages are not left out as they have contributed
tremendously to the development and reorganization of human society. Hence
their clarion calls for a better society. Thus it is on this note that we are
going to review the opinions of philosophers, both past and present, concerning
the political situation of any given society; paying more attention to the
nature of political power and its structural systems regarding the affairs of
the state in general.
1.1
Ancient Period
This
period witnessed the concern of man to have a well ordered and organized state
whereby its citizens will uphold the issue of moral values, especially as it
pertains to the issue of justice and equity. As such, there are many
philosophers in this period that were involved in the reformation of the state,
but we are going to look at the contributions made by few of them. One of the
philosophers of this period we are going to see is Aristophanes. He opined in
his political philosophy that the system of governing the state should not be
democracy but communism. Therefore he criticized democracy saying that many
unqualified and lazy persons joined the legislative for the sake of financial
rewards. And this is very obvious with regard to Nigerian political situation
which we are going to see shortly. Thus many politicians are in politics simply
because of money. He goes further to say that “in democracy, people are given political
posts even if they were not equipped for it.”[1]
In other words, many politicians are given certain positions they do not merit,
that is, those we can call political office seekers. Hence he argues for
communism as the best option for proper governance of the state. Communism for
him will incorporate every member of the state and proper justice will be
maintained.
Plato
in his view outlined five forms of government, namely, aristocracy, timocracy,
plutocracy, democracy and despotism, but he favours aristocracy. According to
him, aristocracy stands as the best form of government where only
Philosopher-kings should be rulers. He intended to establish an ideal society
where the state of affairs and the people’s moral conscience will rule.
However, he was deeply disenchanted with the type of politics practiced in
Athens, particularly with the way the Athenian government executed Socrates,
and had consistently failed to produce good leaders. Hence his clarion calls
for upholding morality and the agitation for Philosopher-kings to be rulers.
Moreover, his intention was to establish an ideal society where its leaders
would be guided by reason and justice maintained. He saw them (Philosopher-kings)
as the best option in the search for good leaders and the need to promote
morality especially among the youths who are future leaders. Thus, Plato
envisioned leaders with the aptitude for wisdom to govern the society and
legislate for it.
Aristotle
in his contribution viewed the state as the association of human beings where
all man’s needs are provided. The existence of the state is for the provision
of the natural needs of man; thus, the state is viewed as the natural
association of man. And man being a rational and political animal should best
secure good life in the society. ‘The good life’ here according to Aristotle
includes political good, economic independence and virtuous life. As regards
power, he said that, “the citizens at large administer the state for the common
interest, so that the government is called by the generic name, a
constitution.”[2]
The power of those in office should be controlled by the law since good laws
are supreme in the state. Aristotle as we could see in his politics elevated
the citizens to the level of the administration of the government and as it
pertains to the political power in the society. Equally, he opined that the
common interest matters as much as it gives everybody equal opportunity to
participate in the affairs of the government. Therefore he saw the government
as involving, virtually, every citizen, as it is called by a generic name. So
the constitution forms part and parcel of the government and it must be
properly established and executed.
1.2
Medieval Period
Having
seen the contributions made by some political philosophers in the preceding
period, let’s now talk of the medieval period. Here we have many philosophers
to consider, as it were, but we shall concentrate on a few of them. Among them
was St. Augustine.
He was not a political philosopher as such, but contributed immensely as far as
commonwealth and social order of any organized society are concerned. According
to him, true commonwealth can never exist if there is no real justice in the
community. “But”, he said, “true justice is found only in that whose founder
and ruler is Christ . . . we cannot deny that it is the ‘weal’ of the
community.”[3] As
we can see, he is more of a theologian since he makes Christ the terminus ad quem of man’s existence.
Nevertheless his defense of commonwealth and justice are very much
indispensable in any political society. Hence for any meaningful political
society to exist there must be real justice and commonwealth. Lack of these two
principles of government characterizes the Nigerian democracy. And these, no
doubt, must have their foundation in Christ just as St. Augustine upholds.
However this justice must be equitably distributed and maintained. This, by
implication, means that the power holders must pay attention to the citizens’
well-being; and the citizens must not be found wanting in obedience to the
leaders. Secondly, Thomas Aquinas in his part also presented us with his
doctrine of justice which begets common good. These principles are never found
in a vacuum for they are within the reach of men with common good. For Aquinas,
the object of justice is “right.”[4]
What this means is that every individual’s right ought to be respected.
Therefore, every member must respect his or her individual right and the right
of others. On this point Isidore opined that, “a man is said to be just because
he respects the rights of others.”[5]
Finally Aquinas concluded that justice means rendering to an individual his
right, all for the common good of the political state.
1.3
Modern Period
From
the medieval to the modern period we have seen the contributions of some
political thinkers and their ideologies. We can see in those periods the
indispensable role of ethical values and how they contribute to the
establishment of an ideal state. It is their view that true justice contributes
to the shaping of the society, if well appreciated. However their thought appears
to be more of utopia than real, especially, when we consider the political
philosophy of Plato and Aristotle.
The
modern period could thus be seen as the high point of political theory and
ideologies. The philosophers of this period were so much concerned with the
nature of political states and their governance. They were so much interested
in how best a state could be governed through reasonable and courageous leaders,
and at the same time ensuring good relationship among its citizens. Let’s see
the political philosophy of Thomas Hobbes, in this modern period, which was summarized
in the concept, SOCIAL CONTRACT. The “Social
contract”, according to him, “is a contract by which men avoid the state of
nature and enter into civil society…”[6]
But prior to this civil society man was in a natural state that was
characterized by warfare; a situation, where because of man’s freedom, there
was struggle for glory, diffidence and urge for competition. A state of war, as
opined by Hobbes, where ‘men live without a common power to keep them all in
awe; they are in that condition which is called “war”. This happens when one sheepishly
follows his inclinations and dispositions. However it is in this contract
(social contract) that men surrender their powers and strength to sovereignty
to be governed and legislated for. Thus he says, “…by conferring all their
powers and strength upon one man, or upon an assembly of men, to bear their
person, to reduce all their will into one.”[7]
This contract so enacted is called a commonwealth. The contract establishes an
absolute government. Commonwealth becomes the sovereign to whom the people
entrust their power to provide for their peace and security. The sovereign
exercises his authority by prescribing rules where every man may know what
goods he may enjoy and what actions he may perform without being molested by
any body. Summarily the sovereign exercises the political power, hearing and
deciding disputes.
John
Locke was also of the view that social contract should remain the best option
for the civil society. In fact he was one of the flag-bearers of social
contract, just as Hobbes. He did not see it as a situation of servitude on the
part of the citizens to their rulers. Rather the citizens submitted their
legislative and executive powers in order to be governed. Hence the pact makes
them a “single body politic”[8],
making them equal and free men, both the rulers and the ruled. It is important
to note that this power is a fiduciary power, which means that it is given on
trust. Therefore, the legislature must ensure good, justified governance,
otherwise dissolved. Consequently, “there remains in the people a supreme power
to remove or alter the legislative when they find the legislative act contrary
to the trust reposed in them.”[9]
Since it is only a power on trust, it means that the people are still in charge,
unlike the absolute monarchy of Hobbes. Rousseau was also in this line of
thought when he was talking about the ‘General Will’, which he said, belongs to
the people. And so the people’s sovereignty cannot be alienated from them for
it belongs to them. Having seen this, let’s see the situation of politics as it
pertains to contemporary period.
1.4
Contemporary Period
Political
thought and theories continued up till the contemporary period. However, the
period witnessed a serious political crisis. There is less interest in politics
as long as this period is concerned; and Alfred Cobban viewed political
philosophy of this period as a discipline that has less attention. This view
does not mean that the philosophers of this period were not concerned with
political society and the system of governance during their time, but they
lacked the interest and the zeal in redirecting their thought towards political
situation of the society. In fact, there is a kind of decline as it pertains to
political philosophy. The philosophers rather, paid much of their attention to
the reality of the universe and the place of man’s existence in the world. They
questioned how best one can live an authentic life in the world, not excluding
the society, in which one lives. However these not withstanding, we shall see
how they directed their thought towards the shaping of the individual’s reason
in the society. Here we see John Stuart mill who began his essay “On Liberty”
by writing: “The subject of this essay is not the so-called Liberty of the
Will… but civil or social liberty: the nature and the limits of the power which
can be legitimately exercised by the society over the individual.”[10]
This civil liberty offers every citizen an opportunity of participation in the government.
A liberty that involves: liberty of conscience, which is, of expressing and
publishing of opinions, liberty of association, and so on. As regards
democracy, he voted Representative Democracy as the best form of government.
The reason for this option is that it makes people more active and gives the
individual better opportunity for intellectual growth, virtue and socially responsible
life. Also the community, according to him, possesses the power of governance.
Therefore, everybody has legitimate freedom to take active part in the
government. Thus he says,
“the best form of government is that in which
the sovereignty or the supreme controlling power in the last resort is vested
in the entire aggregate of the community, every citizen not only having a voice
in the exercise of the ultimate sovereignty, but being, at least occasionally,
called on to take on actual part in the government, by the personal discharge
of some public function, local or general.”[11]
This
in no doubt presents a true government that is devoid of tyranny and despotism.
Power is reasonably and considerably utilized.
The
next person is Karl Marx who brought about his theory of dialectical
materialism. According to him, the state is divided into two unequal parts, namely
the bourgeoisie and the proletariat classes. It is a state of class struggle
and conflict between the bourgeois class and the proletariat class. Such a
state could be referred to as “a state of the survival of the fittest”; each of
the classes struggling to survive. In fact, it is a situation, which involves a
serious struggle of opponents. Thus, the state, according to him, is the
society under the control of the bourgeois class. They, as the rulers, dictate
their will and interests in the state in the form of law and institutions. This
situation was viewed as characterized by struggle, antagonism, domination and
all sorts of inhuman treatment. Therefore, it is his dream that there will be a
time when everything will be normalized. This will eventually give birth to a
classless society of citizens with equal rights. This will come about when the
proletariat revolts against the ruling class and overthrow them in order to set
up communism. Then this state of equal right will give everybody equal
opportunity of participation in a true democracy. Communism according to Marx
is:
“The positive
transcendence of private property or human estrangement, the real appropriation
of the human essence by and for man…genuine resolution of the conflict between
man and nature, and between man and man…”[12]
By communism Marx meant a
time when capitalism (the oppressive system), with its concomitant evils, will
be destroyed through revolution by the oppressed (masses). This will bring to
an end the exploitation of man by man, the end of alienation, the end of
conflicts and antagonism among men. Also, private property and private
ownership of the means of production will be abolished and the goods of the
society will be owned by all. The same revolution will introduce a classless
society where everybody will be equal and man determines for himself in his
natural state. With the disappearance of class distinction in this new society
which communism will usher in, the state will equally disappear since the state
is simply an instrument of class rule. Thus, the final goal of Marxism is to
set up “a classless and stateless communist society in which there will be no
more conflicts, antagonism among men, exploitation, poverty, everybody will be
free, happy and live in peace with his fellow man.”13 And so, the positive transcendence of
human estrangement which Marx is talking about is realized when man has been
able to subdue his tendency to keep acquiring, which is done through revolution
against capitalism. This will then give man the opportunity to use and make real
appropriation of the human resources to reach everybody in the communist
society.
[1]M. I. Nwoko, Basic World Political
Theories ( Ancient- Contemporary ), p. 15
[2]M. I. Nwoko, Ibid. p. 28
[3] City of God,
bk. ii. chap. 20, p.75
[4]Summa Theologica, IIa Hae, Quest. 57, Art. 1 ff.
[5]M. I. Nwoko, op. cit., p.
53
[6] M. I. Nwoko, op. cit., p. 72
[7]T. Hobbes, Leviathan, p. 100
[8] M. I. Nwoko, op. cit., p.
82
[9]S. E. Stumpf, Philosophy:
History and Problems, 5th ed., 1994, p. 273
[10] J. S. Mill, On Liberty,
ch. 1, p. 267
[11]J. S. Mill, Representative Government, ch. 2, (p. 336 of G. B. W. W.
vol. 43)
[12] K. Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscript of 1844
13 J. I. Omoregbe, A Simplified
History of Western Philosophy, vol.11 Modern Philosophy, (Lagos: Joja Educational Research and
Publishers Ltd., 2001) P. 149