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Statesman Nakasone
| Article
# : |
10732 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
1 / 1986 |
4,968 Words |
| Author
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Kichitaro Katsuda Kichitaro Katsuda, Professor of Law School, Kyoto University,
Japan. |
Statesman and Politician
Italian philosopher Gaetano Mosca (1858-1941), a dispassionate observer of politics and human beings, once wrote on the distinction between a "statesman" and a "politician"
"The statesman is a man who, by the breadth of his knowledge and the depth of his knowledge and the depth of his insight, acquires a clear and accurate awareness of the needs of the society in which he lives, and who knows how to find the best means for leading that society with the lest possible shock and suffering to the goal which it should, or at least can, attain."
On the other hand, "The politician is a man who has the qualifications that are required for reaching the highest posts in the governmental system and knows how to stay there."
After making that distinction, Mosca continues as follows: "It is a great good fortune for a people when it can find leaders who combine the eminent and rare qualities of the statesman with the secondary qualities of the politician; and its is no mean stroke of luck for a nation when its politicians have at their elbows statesman by whose views they can profit." (The Ruling Class)
Were Mosca to be revived on earth to observe the current administration of the island nation in the Far East, his evaluation of Prime Minister Nakasone's government and its political achievements would probably be very favorable.
Of course,
... (1997 of 31170 Characters)
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