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State vs government?
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All Flashcards in Topic 7.1
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7.1.18 cards
State vs government?
The state is the lasting political body over a territory; the government is just the team currently running it.
State vs nation?
A state is a political body over a territory; a nation is a people who feel they belong together. One state can hold many nations.
Power?
The plain ability to make people do things, including by force if needed.
Authority?
The RIGHT to be obeyed — accepted as rightful, not merely obeyed out of fear.
Sovereignty?
Being the top authority over a territory — no one above the state giving orders inside its borders.
Civil society?
The organised life between the individual and the state — clubs, charities, faiths, unions — where people organise themselves.
Is a state just a big gang?
It may start as the strongest gang, but becomes a state only when it gains authority — the accepted right to rule.
Power vs authority in one line?
Power is the muscle; authority is the right to be obeyed. A state claims both, a gang only the first.
7.1.28 cards
The state of nature?
An imagined situation with no state, no laws and no shared authority — used to ask why we'd want a state at all.
The social contract?
The idea that a state's authority rests on an agreement people would make to set it up, to escape a worse life without one.
Hobbes on the state?
With no state, life is a 'war of all against all', so we'd hand near-absolute power to a strong ruler for safety.
Locke on the state?
We already have natural rights but no fair way to protect them, so we set up a LIMITED state — replaceable if it violates those rights.
Rousseau's general will?
What's genuinely good for the whole community; when law expresses it, obeying is ruling yourself, so you stay free.
Ibn Khaldun's asabiyya?
Group solidarity — the shared 'we-feeling' that binds a people; states rise on strong asabiyya and fall as it fades.
The 'I never signed it' objection?
The contract isn't literally signed — a fair state is one you WOULD agree to, and you accept its benefits every day.
Contract vs asabiyya — different questions?
The contract JUSTIFIES a state (a deal we'd accept); asabiyya explains what HOLDS it together (real solidarity).
7.1.38 cards
Forms of government?
Monarchy (rule by one), oligarchy (a few), democracy (the many), authoritarian/totalitarian (force), theocracy (religion).
Legitimacy?
The accepted RIGHT to rule, not just the power to — usually earned by consent, fair process, or serving the common good.
Power vs legitimacy?
A coup gives power (control); legitimacy is the accepted right to rule. A government can have all the power and still not be legitimate.
Two-way obligations?
You owe the state obedience to fair laws and tax; the state owes you protection, fairness and service to the common good.
Totalitarian vs authoritarian?
Both rule by force with little freedom; totalitarian control reaches into every part of life, not just politics.
The case for revolution?
Locke: a state that attacks the rights it was built to protect breaks its side of the deal, so the people may replace it.
The anarchist challenge?
Maybe no state is ever fully legitimate — it asks the state to justify its right to force people, rather than assuming it.
Is keeping order enough for legitimacy?
No — a regime can keep perfect order by terror; most think legitimacy also needs consent or fairness.
7.1.48 cards
Political obligation?
A real moral duty to obey the state and its laws — not just fear of punishment.
Where does the duty to obey come from?
Fairness: the state protects you and you take its benefits daily, so it's unfair to refuse your part while relying on others obeying.
Is the duty to obey absolute?
No — it rests on the state being roughly fair; a deeply unjust law that attacks basic rights can forfeit the duty to obey it.
Civil disobedience?
Openly and peacefully breaking an unjust law and accepting the penalty, to change that law while respecting law in general.
Civil disobedience vs revolution?
Civil disobedience keeps the state but changes one unjust law; revolution overthrows and replaces the whole state.
Why set the bar for disobedience high?
If everyone disobeyed laws they disliked, society would fall apart — so disobedience must be for serious injustice, done openly.
The topic's chain of ideas?
Where authority comes from → what makes rule legitimate → whether we owe obedience. Each sets up the next.
What lifts a Section B essay to the top band?
Arguing for AND against the claim, weighing the views and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing one side.
Topic 7.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for The state
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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