(selfgovernment). The word for means that there should be public interest about political power. Three theories Firstly, Plato Statesman: He divides forms of government into good-ones (rule of law) and bad-ones (lawless rule). So, when one person rules de jure it is called Monarchy, but if he or she rules illegally, it is called Tyranny. When a few people rules de jure it is called Aristocracy and when they do not have the legal right to rule, it is called Oligarchy. If many people rule de jure it is called Good- or The Real - Democracy, but if they rule illegally, it is called "Bad" Democracy. (McLaughlin, 2010) Secondly, Aristotle Politics: His dividing is the same as Plato's, but there are one little difference. If Plato divided good- and bad-ones considering law, then Aristotle considers goodness (good the tule of common good, bad for good of rules). Aristotle says that when many people rule for common good, it should be
o Agnostic, agnosticism, alphabet, alphabetic, analyst, analytic, anthocyanin, astrobleme, atheism, automatic, biologist, biology, blasphemy, charismatic, chemotherapy, chronobiology, cinematography, critic, criticism, dinosaur, dogmatic, dogmatism, dramatic, dramatist, electric, electronic, enigmatic, epistemic, epistemology, gene, genetic, herpetology, narcolepsy, odyssey, oligarchy, patriarch, phenomenology, photograph, pterodactyl, sympathomimetic. Modern o Bouzouki, moussaka, ouzo, rebetika, sirtaki, souvlaki. 6. Celtic borrowings Later Celtic borrowings o clan offspring, family, stock, o usquebaugh uisge beatha water of life, f. uisge water + beatha life - Whisky o loch - In Scotland: a lake; an arm of the sea, esp. when narrow or partially land-locked. o slogan sluagh-ghairm, f