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Full Idea
Every free action has a moral cause, the will, and a physical cause, the power to act. ...The body politic has the same moving causes, namely the legislative power, and executive power. Nothing should be done without their concurrence.
Gist of Idea
The state has a legislature and an executive, just like the will and physical power in a person
Source
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (The Social Contract (tr Cress) [1762], III.01)
Book Ref
Rousseau,Jean-Jacques: 'The Basic Political Writings', ed/tr. Cress,Donald A. [Hackett 1987], p.173
A Reaction
[compressed] This terminology is now standard in political philosophy. An absolute monarch like Edward III presumably embodies both branches.
6329 | People are hard to govern because authorities love to do things [Laozi (Lao Tzu)] |
19980 | If a government is to be preserved, it must first be loved [Montesquieu] |
19996 | A government has a legislature, an international executive, and a domestic executive [Montesquieu] |
3927 | Society prefers helpful lies to harmful truth [Hume] |
19820 | The state has a legislature and an executive, just like the will and physical power in a person [Rousseau] |
19827 | Law makers and law implementers should be separate [Rousseau] |
7228 | Individuals often do things better than governments [Mill] |
20254 | People govern for the pleasure of it, or just to avoid being governed [Nietzsche] |
20939 | What is the function of a parliament? Does it even constitute a part of the State structure? [Gramsci] |
22236 | The big question of the Renaissance was how to govern everything, from the state to children [Foucault] |
20506 | 'Separation of powers' allows legislative, executive and judicial functions to monitor one another [Wolff,J] |