Elite Government in a Democratic Society: An Interpretation on J. S. Mill’s Considerations on Representative Government
Author: Juin-lung Huang
Abstract / Chinese PDF Download
This essay interprets John S. Mill’s most important writing of democratic theory,Considerations on Representative Government, with a view of his intention andstrategy in writing. I argue that with the intention of acquire empathicunderstanding and acceptance from the British mass Mill adapts a peculiar kind ofrhetoric strategy. Praising first the ideal of democracy to greet the mass, thenrevealing step by step their insufficiency in both intelligence and character, Mill triedto lead them to accept his elitist mode of democracy.Scholars who missed Mill’s intention and strategy of argument in this writingregarded him either as an enthusiastic partisan for democracy, an anti-democraticelitist, or a theorist who offered no solution to the contradiction between democracyand elitism. However, Mill is not an enthusiastic partisan for democracy, fordemocracy, in his view, was no more an ideal, but an essential political reality thatshould be examined. Nor is he an anti-democrat, for he respects the fact of popularsovereignty. Finally, Mill did offer his solution to the contradiction betweendemocracy and elitism. In fact, Considerations on Representative Government as awhole should be considered as his daring enterprise persuading democratic British toaccept elitist government.