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Political Science Notes

The document provides an overview of Political Science, covering its meaning, definitions, nature, and scope, as well as its relationship with other disciplines like Sociology, History, and Economics. It discusses the theories of the state, including the Shanti Parva and Kautilya’s Saptanga Theory, highlighting their moral and practical implications. Additionally, it contrasts Hindu and Islamic concepts of the state, emphasizing their foundational principles and governance structures.

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Ritvik Tokala
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views8 pages

Political Science Notes

The document provides an overview of Political Science, covering its meaning, definitions, nature, and scope, as well as its relationship with other disciplines like Sociology, History, and Economics. It discusses the theories of the state, including the Shanti Parva and Kautilya’s Saptanga Theory, highlighting their moral and practical implications. Additionally, it contrasts Hindu and Islamic concepts of the state, emphasizing their foundational principles and governance structures.

Uploaded by

Ritvik Tokala
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Political Science notes

UNIT 1 : introduction

1. Meaning and Origin

 Term Politics from Greek word Polis (city-state).


 Aristotle = Father of Political Science; his work Politics is foundational.
 Politics = everything related to the State and its governance.

2. Definitions

 Paul Janet: Study of foundations of the State & principles of government.


 Gettell: Historical (past), analytical (present), ethical (future) study of the State.
 Harold Lasswell & Kaplan: Shaping and sharing power.
 David Easton: Authoritative allocation of values.
 Garner: Begins and ends with the State.
 Stephen Leacock: Deals with Government.
 Max Weber: Struggle for power.

3. Nature of Political Science

 Debate: Is it science or not?


o Aristotle, Hobbes → Politics is a science.
o J.S. Mill, Comte → Politics not an exact science.
 Combination: Both science (systematic, empirical) and art (practical guidelines).
 Political phenomena complex → predictions possible, but not exact like natural
sciences.
 Considered a social science with normative + empirical approaches.

4. Scope of Political Science

 Study of the State:


o As it is (empirical/analytical).
o As it has been (historical).
o As it ought to be (normative/ethical).
 Includes:
o Political theories (idealism, liberalism, communism, fascism).
o Core concepts: democracy, liberty, equality, sovereignty, power, authority,
legitimacy.
o Political socialization, public administration, national & international
organizations.
o International relations (peace, war, diplomacy).

5. Key Takeaways

 Politics = study of power, state, and government.


 Political Science is both theoretical & practical.
 It studies laws, administration, diplomacy, and social values.
 It cannot reach the precision of natural sciences but remains a systematic social
science.

Relationship between political science and other science

1. General Relationship

 Political Science is closely linked with History, Sociology, Ethics, Economics,


Jurisprudence, and Public Administration.
 It studies the global political economy and shares a symbiotic relationship with
other social sciences.

2. Political Science and Sociology

 Sociology = Science of society; Political Science = Science of the state.


 Both influence each other:
o Politics depends on social structure (class, caste, religion, customs).
o Sociology gets insights from political institutions.
 Example: Hindu Marriage Act, communal riots, revolutions → have both political
and social dimensions.

3. Political Science and History

 “History without Political Science has no fruit; Political Science without History
has no root.” (Seeley)
 History = past politics, Politics = present history.
 History provides facts & context; Political Science derives laws & principles.
 History = “laboratory of Political Science.”
4. Political Science and Economics

 Economics = study of wealth, Political Science = study of power.


 Both aim at social welfare.
 Earlier, Economics was called Political Economy.
 Government policies like taxation, tariffs, ownership of utilities show the overlap.

5. Political Science and Public Administration

 Political Science = study of state & government.


 Public Administration = implementation of policies.
 “Two sides of the same coin.”
 Politics makes policies → Administration executes them.
 Example: Civil servants draft bills, implement programs.

6. Political Science and Ethics

 Ethics = principles of good life; Politics = realization of common good.


 Close link between law and morality → “What is morally wrong cannot be
politically right.”
 Gandhi: Politics must be guided by truth, love, and non-violence (spiritualized
politics).

7. Political Science and Jurisprudence (Law)

 Political Science = State & Government; Jurisprudence = Law.


 Laws are made, enforced, and implemented by the State.
 Nature of laws differs in democracy vs dictatorship, capitalism vs socialism.

Theories of origin and development of the state


1. Meaning and Origin

 Term “State” comes from Latin word status.


 First used by Machiavelli (1469–1527) in The Prince.
 State = most powerful social institution, natural and universal.
 Aristotle: Man is a social and political animal; state exists for the sake of a good life.

2. Definitions

 Woodrow Wilson: People organized for law within a definite territory.


 Aristotle: Union of families and villages for a self-sufficient good life.
 Burgess: Organized unit of mankind.
 Sidgwick: Association of persons (government + governed) within a definite territory.
 Garner: Community of people in a territory, free from external control, with
organized government.
 Laski: Territorial society divided into government & subjects, with supreme coercive
power.

3. Essential Elements of the State

(A) Physical Bases

1. Population
o People make the state.
o Plato: Ideal number = 5040.
o Aristotle: Population should be large enough to be self-sufficient but small
enough to be well-governed.
o No fixed size in modern states.
2. Territory
o No state without territory (land, water, air-space).
o Needed for citizenship & governance.
o Size varies (India = 32,87,263 sq. km, 2.4% of global area).
o Prof. Elliott: Territorial sovereignty = state’s superiority within boundaries +
freedom from external control.

(B) Political Bases

3. Government
o Working agency of the state; political organization.
o Appadorai: Agency through which state’s will is expressed.
o C.F. Strong: Highest authority needed to make and enforce laws.
4. Sovereignty
o Supreme & final legal authority; no higher power exists.
o Two aspects:
 Internal → Supreme over all citizens & associations.
 External → Independence from foreign control.

4. Characteristics of Sovereignty

 Absoluteness → No legal power above the state.


 Universality → Extends over all persons & associations.
 Permanence → Exists as long as the state exists.
 Indivisibility → Cannot be divided; only one sovereignty in a state.
1. Meaning of Approach

 An approach = way of looking at and explaining politics.


 Decides: problem selection, data collection, and analysis method.

2. Traditional Approaches

1. Comparative Approach
o Aristotle studied 158 constitutions.
o Later used by Montesquieu, De Tocqueville, Bryce.
o Indian Constituent Assembly benefited from it.
o Compares institutions across countries considering social, moral, political, and
economic differences.
2. Historical Approach
o Political institutions grow out of history, not suddenly created.
o To understand present & plan future, study past political systems.
3. Legal Approach
o Politics studied through law and judicial institutions.
o State exists to create & enforce law.
o Sources: constitutions, codes, judicial decisions.
o Applied widely in Europe (Germany, Belgium, France).
4. Institutional Approach
o Focus on formal structures (legislature, executive, judiciary).
o Also informal ones (parties, pressure groups).
o Also called structural approach.
5. Philosophical/Ethical Approach
o Concerned with values, justice, ethics.
o Leaders of Indian National Movement emphasized it.
o Gandhi: Means and ends inseparable → politics as ethics.

3. Modern Approaches

1. Sociological Approach
o State = social organization.
o Studies political culture, kinship, race, religion, language.
o Focus on interest groups and their role.
2. Psychological Approach
o Focus on instincts, habits, emotions, motivations.
o Political behavior influenced by psychology of leaders & citizens.
o Thinkers: Plato, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Bentham.
3. Economic Approach
o Politics influenced by economic factors (wealth, class, production).
o Marx → politics = rooted in economics.
o Strong economy = political strength & stability.
4. System’s Approach
o Developed by Ludwig Von Bertalanffy (1920s).
o State = system with structures & sub-structures.
o Studies national & international politics as interacting systems.
5. Input-Output Approach
o Extension of institutional approach.
o Inputs = demands/pressures; Outputs = decisions/policies.
o Political system converts demands into decisions.
6. Behavioural Approach
o Developed after 1940 (Graham Wallas, Arthur Bentley).
o Focus on beliefs, attitudes, actions of individuals.
o Robert Dahl: Makes political science more empirical & scientific.

 Traditional approaches = Historical, Legal, Philosophical, Comparative,


Institutional (focus on norms, values, institutions).
 Modern approaches = Sociological, Psychological, Economic, System, Input-
Output, Behavioural (focus on empirical, scientific, social behavior).

indian context santiparva and kauilayas saptang theory


1. Shanti Parva (Mahabharata) – Theory of State

 Found in the Shanti Parva section of the Mahabharata.


 Explains the origin and purpose of the State in ancient India.
 Key Ideas:
o In the beginning, people lived in a state of nature → chaos, lawlessness,
injustice.
o To end disorder, people selected a King (Raja).
o King was given power to protect dharma (justice, righteousness).
o State was seen as a moral institution, with duty to ensure peace, security, and
justice.
 Basis of the social contract idea in Indian political thought.

2. Kautilya’s Saptanga Theory (Arthashastra)

 Propounded by Kautilya (Chanakya) in Arthashastra.


 State compared to a living organism → just as the body has 7 organs, the state has 7
essential elements.
 Saptanga (Seven Limbs of the State):
1. Swami (King/Ruler) – Head of the state; ensures protection and prosperity.
2. Amatya (Ministers/Officials) – Advisors and administrators to assist the
king.
3. Janapada (Territory & Population) – Land and people forming the basis of
the state.
4. Durga (Fort/Capital) – Physical security, defense, and administrative center.
5. Kosha (Treasury) – Economic resources, wealth, and revenue of the state.
6. Danda (Army/Force) – Military power to defend and enforce law.
7. Mitra (Allies/Friends) – Foreign relations and diplomacy.
 Emphasis: A state survives only if all seven limbs function properly. Weakness in
any one organ can endanger the state.
 More pragmatic and realistic than the Shanti Parva theory; stresses power,
administration, and security.

3. Comparison in Indian Context

 Shanti Parva → Ethical & moral basis of state; king chosen to protect dharma.
 Saptanga Theory → Practical & administrative framework; state as a scientific
system.
 Together, they show that Indian political thought recognized both the moral
legitimacy and the practical structure of the state.

1. Hindu Concept of State

 Rooted in Dharmashastras, Mahabharata (Shanti Parva), Manusmriti,


Arthashastra (Kautilya).
 Origin of State:
o Initially, people lived in disorder (Matsya Nyaya – “law of the fish” → strong
devour the weak).
o To avoid chaos, people chose a King (Raja) → like a social contract theory.
 Purpose of State:
o Uphold Dharma (justice, righteousness).
o Ensure peace, order, and prosperity.
 King’s Role:
o Seen as divinely sanctioned but bound by Dharma.
o Must protect subjects, collect taxes fairly, punish wrongdoers.
 Kautilya’s Saptanga Theory (7 elements of state):
o Swami (King), Amatya (Ministers), Janapada (Territory/People), Durga
(Fort/Capital), Kosha (Treasury), Danda (Army), Mitra (Allies).
o State as a living organism → survival depends on balance of all elements.
 Nature: Ethical + Pragmatic; blends morality (Shanti Parva) with power-politics
(Arthashastra).

2. Islamic Concept of State

 Rooted in Quran, Hadith, and Islamic jurisprudence (Sharia).


 Origin of State:
o State is not man-made; it is divinely ordained.
o Purpose is to enforce the Will of Allah as revealed in Quran and Sunnah.
 Purpose of State:
o Establish justice (‘adl), maintain peace, and ensure welfare (maslahah).
o Enforce Sharia (Islamic law) in all aspects of life.
 Ruler (Khalifa/Imam):
o Considered vicegerent of Allah on earth.
o Must govern according to Quran and Hadith, not personal will.
o Accountable to both people and Allah.
 Nature of Authority:
o Sovereignty belongs to Allah alone.
o People exercise authority as a trust (amanah).
 Features:
o Unity of religion and politics (no separation of church and state).
o Shura (consultation) with people in decision-making.
o Equality of all believers (Ummah).

3. Comparison
Aspect Hindu Concept of State Islamic Concept of State

Source of Based on Dharma; King as upholder of Sovereignty belongs to Allah; ruler is His
Authority law vicegerent

Divine ordination (from Quran &


Origin Social contract (to end Matsya Nyaya)
Sunnah)

King (Raja), guided by Dharma & aided


Ruler Khalifa/Imam, guided strictly by Sharia
by ministers

Purpose Protection of Dharma, peace, prosperity Enforcement of Sharia, justice, welfare

Dharma, customs, Arthashastra (secular


Law Sharia (Quran, Hadith, Ijma, Qiyas)
+ religious)

Religion & Sometimes distinguished (practical +


No separation; politics is part of religion
Politics moral views)

Ethical + pragmatic (balance of Dharma


Nature Theocratic (Allah’s will supreme)
& power)

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