David Phillips

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Strayer's account leaves little room for the pursuit of the common good as a historical explanation for the rise of the state. According to Strayer, the development of regularized systems of revenue extraction and accounting, law courts, and assemblies were undertaken with reference to its advantages for particular parties, namely the royal household and the propertied classes, and without reference to anything like a common good.
Migrations of the Holy: God, State, and the Political Meaning of the Church
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