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Isonomia (ἰσονομία "equality ofpolitical rights,"[1][2] from the Greek ἴσοςisos, "equal," and νόμοςnomos, "usage, custom, law,"[1]) was a word used byancient Greek writers such asHerodotus[3] andThucydides[4] to refer to some kind of popular government. It was subsequently eclipsed until brought back into English asisonomy ("equality of law"). EconomistFriedrich Hayek attempted to popularize the term in his bookThe Constitution of Liberty and argued that a better understanding of isonomy, as used by the Greeks, defines the term to mean "the equal application of the laws to all."[5]
Mogens Herman Hansen has argued that, although often translated as "equality of law,"isonomia was in fact something else.[2] Along withisonomia, the Athenians used several terms forequality[2] all compounds beginning withiso-:isegoria[6] (equal right to address the political assemblies),isopsephos polis[7] (one man one vote) andisokratia[8] (equality of power).
When Herodotus invents a debate among thePersians over what sort of government they should have, he has Otanes speak in favor ofisonomia when, based on his description of it, we might expect him to call the form of government he favors "democracy."
The rule of the people has the fairest name of all, equality (isonomia), and does none of the things that a monarch does. The lot determines offices, power is held accountable, and deliberation is conducted in public.[3]
Thucydides usedisonomia as an alternative to dynastic oligarchy[9] and moderate aristocracy.[10] In time the word ceased to refer to a particular political regime;Plato uses it to refer to simply equal rights[11] and Aristotle does not use the word at all.[12]
Ancient Greek philosophy linked toisonomía withisegoria (prior equality in determining principles of law) andisocratía (equality in subsequent governance or application of law)[13]
'Isonomia' was also used in Hellenic times by Pythagorean physicians, such as Alkmaeon, who used it to refer to the balance or equality of those opposite pairs of hot/cold, wet/dry and bitterness/sweetness that maintained the health of the body. Thus:
Alkmaeon said that the equality (isonomia) of the powers (wet, dry, cold, hot, bitter, sweet, etc.) maintains health, but that monarchy [one overruling] among them produces disease.[14]
According to economist and political theoristFriedrich Hayek,isonomia was championed by the RomanCicero[15] and "rediscovered" in the eleventh century AD by the law students ofBologna who he says are credited with founding much of the Western legal tradition.
Isonomia was imported into England at the end of the sixteenth century as a word meaning "equality of laws to all manner of persons".[15] Soon after, it was used by the translator ofLivy in the form "Isonomy"[15] (although not a direct translation ofisonomia) to describe a state of equal laws for all and responsibility of the magistrates. During the seventeenth century it was gradually replaced by the phrases "equality before the law", "rule of law" and "government of law".[15]
Political theoristHannah Arendt argued that isonomy was equated with political freedom at least from the time of Herodotus. The word essentially denoted a state of no-rule, in which there was no distinction between rulers and ruled. It was "the equality of those who form a body of peers." Isonomy was unique among the forms of government in the ancient lexicon in that it lacked the suffixes "-archy" and "-cracy" which denote a notion of rule in words like "monarchy" and "democracy." Arendt goes on to argue that the Greekpolis was therefore conceived not as a democracy but as an isonomy. "Democracy" was the term used by opponents of isonomy who claimed that "what you say is 'no-rule' is in fact only another kind of rulership...rule by thedemos," or majority.[16]
The public administration theorist,Alberto Guerreiro Ramos, reserved for isonomy a central role in his model of human organization. He was particularly concerned with distinguishing the space of the isonomy from that of the economy. Following Arendt, Guerreiro Ramos argued that individuals should have the opportunity to engage with others in settings that are unaffected by economizing considerations. The isonomy constitutes such a setting; its function is to "enhance the good life of the whole."[17]
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