This chapter tries to find to what extent a form of government can be devised or chosen by a particular people for themselves; and if there is some possibility there, what are it's limitations.
- Mill posits that there are two popular opinions on this question
- government is purely an invention which can be devised or chosen by a people to be applied
- government is like an organic growth; it's form is inevitable for a given people / context and cannot be chosen
- Mill finds it self evident that the truth is somewhere between the two
- There are some obstacles that may make a particular form of government untenable
- Repugnance of the people towards a particular form of government
- A people unwilling or unable to fulfill the necessary conditions
- may be due to laziness, cowardice or lack of patriotism
- unwilling to fight for it; when attacked
- able to be deluded easily; or convinced to hand over liberties to some individual
- unwilling to leave vengeance to he law – results in a necessarily despotic government
- people more likely to shelter a criminal then to testify against; or whose sympathies are not on the side of the law
- Mechanical difficulties may also make a form of government impossible by disrupting tax collection or law enforcement
- Kindling a desire in people for a particular form a government is a necessary step in forming a new order
- Some claim that the existing power dynamics pre-determine the order of a nation – however, Mill argues that power is actually primarily gained through government itself.
- Beliefs can disrupt physical and economic power
- Mill concludes that the form of government is a result of rational choice on the part of it's people
Some great quotes form this chapter
It [government] needs, not their simple acquiescence, but their active participation
To inquire into the best form of government in the abstract is not a chimerical, but a highly practical employment of scientific intellect
In politics, as in mechanics, the power which is to keep the engine going must be sought for outside the machinery
One person with a belief is a social power equal to ninety-nine who have only interests.