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| | Fukuyama on Trust and Recognition by Andy Blunden (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-19) |
 | | The state, however, is essentially an organisation each of whose members is in itself a group of this kind, and hence no one of its moments should appear as an unorganised aggregate. |
 | | The Many, as units a congenial interpretation of people, are of course something connected, but they are connected only as an aggregate, a formless mass whose commotion and activity could therefore only be elementary, irrational, barbarous, and frightful. |
 | | When we hear speakers on the constitution expatiating about the people this unorganised collection we know from the start that we have nothing to expect but generalities and perverse declamations. |
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