{"has_more":true,"total_items":17,"items":[{"vg_id":0,"journal":"Placing democracy on a par with oligarchy, as little more, in principle or practice, than the monopoly over established governmental offices by, respectively, the many (poor) and the few (wealthy), is to accept fifth-century anti-democratic polemics as an accurate description of political reality. If our goal in returning to Greek antiquity is to gain an understanding of political power that might be of value to us"},{"vg_id":0,"journal":"Selected Greek terms, with citations (4 c. = Fourth century B.C.)"},{"vg_id":0,"journal":"Anarchia: Hdt. 9","doi":"https://doi.org/10.2307/3209081"},{"vg_id":0,"journal":"Thuc. 3.82. 4 c. Plato, Aristotle. Demokratia, and verb forms: Hdt. 6.43, Thuc. 2.37. Many others in 5c. and 4c. Gynkaikokratia. Aristotle"}]}