Abstract
According to Aristotle, democracy and oligarchy are empirically the
most widespread and analytically fundamental ‘constitutions’. I analyse how
in different places in his Politics Aristotle ‘positively’ defines and differentiates
between democracy and oligarchy. At the same time, I substantiate in detail a
new interpretation of Aristotle’s view that significantly differs from the current
interpretation. ‘Combining’ the elements, procedures, and principles of
democracy and oligarchy gives rise to mixed ‘constitutions’, a special place
among which is occupied by the polity or republic, which is the best regime
‘for most states and for most people’. I show the ways in which, according to
Aristotle, it is possible to form such a regime. Carl Schmitt and, later somewhat
differently, Bernard Manin draw a link between Aristotle’s mixed regime
and the representative democracies of today.