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Single Idea 7976

[filed under theme 24. Political Theory / D. Ideologies / 5. Democracy / d. Representative democracy ]

Full Idea

If the people puts itself into the hands of the political class, it does so more to be rid of power than out of any desire for representation.

Gist of Idea

People like democracy because it means they can avoid power

Source

Jean Baudrillard (The Intelligence of Evil [2004], p. 54)

Book Ref

Baudrillard,Jean: 'The Intelligence of Evil or The Lucidity Pact' [Berg 2005], p.54


A Reaction

Very nice. If we are all in the grips of some biological 'will to power', that needn't be power over huge numbers of other people, merely power over our immediate lives. It can be expressed by building a wall.


The 16 ideas from Jean Baudrillard

Without God we faced reality: what do we face without reality? [Baudrillard]
There is no longer anything on which there is nothing to say [Baudrillard]
The task of philosophy is to unmask the illusion of objective reality [Baudrillard]
People like democracy because it means they can avoid power [Baudrillard]
Only in the last 200 years have people demanded the democratic privilege of being individuals [Baudrillard]
There is no need to involve the idea of free will to make choices about one's life [Baudrillard]
The arrival of the news media brought history to an end [Baudrillard]
In modern times, being useless is the essential aesthetic ingredient for an object [Baudrillard]
Whole populations are terrorist threats to authorities, who unite against them [Baudrillard]
Instead of thesis and antithesis leading to synthesis, they now cancel out, and the conflict is levelled [Baudrillard]
Good versus evil has been banefully reduced to happiness versus misfortune [Baudrillard]
Suicide is ascribed to depression, with the originality of the act of will ignored [Baudrillard]
Pascal says secular life is acceptable, but more fun with the hypothesis of God [Baudrillard]
Drunken boat pilots are less likely to collide than clearly focused ones [Baudrillard]
Nothing is true, but everything is exact [Baudrillard]
Some continental philosophers are relativists - Baudrillard, for example [Baudrillard, by Critchley]