Aristotle defined three types of government:1. Monarch: a government ruled by a single person usually a king or queen.
2. Aristocracy/Oligarchy: a government ruled by a small amount of people. (Aristotle was against an Aristocracy because to be a leader you must be wealthy)
3.Democracy: governed by many people. Citizens vote for a leader.
Aristotle distinguished three distinct types of government. They included monarchy, rule by one, polity, rule by many, and aristocracy, rule by the best men.
Monarchy, aristocracy, and constitutional rule.
Plato favored a philosopher king ruling over a society structured under a rigid hierarchy, guided by reason and knowledge. Aristotle, on the other hand, advocated for a mixed government that blended elements of monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy, aiming to avoid the pitfalls of tyranny, oligarchy, and mob rule.
The three branches of government are executive, legislative and judiciary. The executive formulates government polices, the legislative makes and the judiciary interprets the constitution.
Aristotle identified six forms of government: monarchy, aristocracy, polity, tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy. He believed that each form could degrade into a corrupted version (tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy) if not structured properly. Aristocracy and polity were considered the best forms, as they aimed to serve the common good.
Aristotle had three siblings, Demetrius, Hermiala and Vermus
Aristotle classified three styles of government and six types of rulers. The first classification is a tyranny or a monarchy. The second classification is an aristocracy or an oligarchy. The last classification contains both a polity or a democracy.
According to Aristotle, rhetorical situations include the speaker, the audience, and the subject of the speech. Aristotle believed that effective communication arises from considering these three components and tailoring the message to fit the characteristics of each.
In a capitalist system, the government answers the three basic questions.
they are socrates, Plato and Aristotle
Socrates, Plato, Aristotle
It was Socratic, Plato, Aristotle