Order, institutions, models
53
extended it to the cultural realm: against heresy and rebellion, obedience includes
that everybody acknowledges the basic Christian truth ‘Jesus is the Christ’.
4
Locke, Rousseau and Kant all shared the contractarian foundation of the state,
but only John Locke (1632–1704) formulated a major correction in as much as he
set limits to the sovereign’s absolute power over individuals: government cannot
infringe upon man’s natural rights to life, liberty (including liberty of conscience)
and property. Locke also introduced the doctrine of separation of powers that was
developed shortly after him by Montesquieu ( Jean-Louis de Secondat, Baron de
Montesquieu, 1689–1755). Locke is traditionally seen as the founder of
liberalism
5
(the individual’s rights are to be protected against state power), both, in particular
Montesquieu, as the great theorists of
constitutionalism (sovereign power is subject
to a fundamental – not necessarily written – law defining its limits and architec-
ture). Both authors were important for Alexander Hamilton (1755–1804), James
Madison and John Jay (1745–1829), the authors of
The Federalist, the text that most
influenced the development of the newly founded United States of America from
confederation to federation. Between the eighteenth and ninenteenth century the
people, or
demos, took the centre of the system of government under constitu-
tional and liberal premises, which after shifting to universal suffrage fulfilled all the
requirements of what we call
democracy, or the democratic order model, – with one
exception, which was brought into the agenda late in the ninenteenth century and
implemented still later in the twentieth: the state’s intervention aimed at making
effective participation in political and social life possible to everybody by giving
him or her the basic elements of education, health care and age protection. This
addition of
social rights to the previous democratic model, which is now at least seen
in Europe and Canada, but more limitedly in the USA, as a component of it, had
its theoretical proponents in the German social-democracy (starting with Eduard
Bernstein, 1850–1932), the Fabian Society and later the liberal statesman Lord Wil-
liam Beveridge (1879–1963) in the UK, the theoretician of ‘liberal socialism’ Carlo
Rosselli (1899–1937, murdered by the Fascists) in Italy; while it was first realised
by President F. D. Roosevelt in the USA in the Thirties and the Labour govern-
ment (1945–51) in Britain.
6
In a word, constitutional rules, individual liberties and
social rights are the three major features of the democratic model, as politically
institutionalised remedies to the negative side effects of capitalism (more on this in
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