IN SEARCH OF THE PERFECT STATE: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY - Softcover

Book 1 of 3: In Search of the Perfect State

Kudin, Andrew V.

 
9798993534206: IN SEARCH OF THE PERFECT STATE: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Synopsis

Power has a structure. This book maps it.

Every state rests on a claim — a claim about who rules, why they rule, and what gives that rule its force. Strip away the flags, ceremonies, constitutions, and official language, and what remains is architecture: the underlying structure of authority, legitimacy, and order that every political system must somehow build, defend, and justify. In Search of the Perfect State: Foundations of Political Philosophy lays that architecture bare.

This is not a simple history of political ideas moving from Plato to the present. It is a systematic anatomy of the state itself — monarchies and republics, democracies and totalitarian regimes, market economies and planned ones, secular orders and theocracies. Each is examined not as a historical curiosity, but as a distinct philosophical form — a specific answer to one of the oldest questions in political thought: how should power be organized, and on what foundation does it stand?

The inquiry also turns toward the states human beings have only imagined: utopias, technocracies, ecological and digital orders, even a world without the state at all. These imagined orders are not decorative footnotes. They reveal the hidden desires, fears, and contradictions behind political life itself.

Six analytical axes structure the entire work:

  • Form of government
  • Political regime
  • Administrative organization
  • Economic system
  • Religious influence
  • The protection of rights and freedoms


Together, they form a typological framework precise enough for rigorous comparison and flexible enough to hold the full range of political invention — historical, theoretical, and hypothetical.

It assumes no prior training — only the willingness to think hard about how power is built. For the general reader, it opens the subject; for students of political philosophy, theory, and comparative politics, it serves as a course text. It does not displace the classics. It gives readers the tools to read them with new eyes — to see, beneath every argument about justice, sovereignty, or freedom, the structural choices that made those arguments possible.

Before we can judge a state, we have to understand what a state is.

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