Orthodox Republicanism: Difference between revisions
(Added more details to what exactly Orthodox Republicanism is, changed and clarified things at the last paragraph. Added a new paragraph that will be modified at a later date.) |
(Added Theory, worked on Aldonism. Added theory headers for future work. Worked on third paragraph and added detail per last update.) |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
'''Orthodox Republicanism''' ({{wpl|Polish language|Viswe}}: ''Prawosławny Republikanizm''; {{wpl|Hungarian language|Hetumogye}}: ''Ortodox Republikanizmus''; {{wpl|Ukrainian language|Prykordonnyan}}: ''православний республіканізм'') is a {{wpl|political ideology|political}}, {{wpl|political philosophy|philosophy}} and {{wpl|economic ideology}} within the broader [[New Republicanism|New Republican movement]], characterized by the creation of an Orthodox Republic, a government system that is dedicated towards the advancement of the goals of individuals that regards {{wpl|social reform}} as its primary tool of social advancement. An Orthodox Republic primarily focuses on the promotion of {{wpl|human rights}} and {{wpl|social justice}}, while economically is considered to be {{wpl|Centre-left politics|centre-left}}. In its original form, it was considered to be closer to {{wpl|socialism|economic socialism}} however has since trended towards {{wpl|democratic capitalism}} during the 1930's. It has since become the governing ideology of the [[New Republican Coalition]] and the [[Orthodox Republic of Vistulzka]]. | '''Orthodox Republicanism''' ({{wpl|Polish language|Viswe}}: ''Prawosławny Republikanizm''; {{wpl|Hungarian language|Hetumogye}}: ''Ortodox Republikanizmus''; {{wpl|Ukrainian language|Prykordonnyan}}: ''православний республіканізм'') is a {{wpl|political ideology|political}}, {{wpl|political philosophy|philosophy}} and {{wpl|economic ideology}} within the broader [[New Republicanism|New Republican movement]], characterized by the creation of an Orthodox Republic, a government system that is dedicated towards the advancement of the goals of individuals that regards {{wpl|social reform}} as its primary tool of social advancement. An Orthodox Republic primarily focuses on the promotion of {{wpl|human rights}} and {{wpl|social justice}}, while economically is considered to be {{wpl|Centre-left politics|centre-left}}. In its original form, it was considered to be closer to {{wpl|socialism|economic socialism}} however has since trended towards {{wpl|democratic capitalism}} during the 1930's. It has since become the governing ideology of the [[New Republican Coalition]] and the [[Orthodox Republic of Vistulzka]]. | ||
Orthodox Republicanism was originally formulated in the beginning stages by [[Aldona Szczepański]] and [[Krzysztof Baczyński]] during the [[Second Political Odrodzenie]] as an evolutionary branch of [[Common Good Government]]. This was precipitated by the [[Coronation of Mieszko VI]] and the re-establishment of the [[Second Noble Republic of Vistulzka]]. Baczyński brought [[Béla Edvárd]] and [[Yulia Tymoshenko]] in the development of Orthodox Republicanism during the formulation. The four of them were considered part of the [[New Era Vanguards]], and published the ''[[Testament of the States]]'' in 1909, the seminal work that served as the political and ideological basis for Orthodox Republicanism. It was defined by the ideas of {{wpl|progressivism|social progress}}, {{wpl|anti-imperialism|anti-colonialism}}, and {{wpl|Workers' self-management|labor management}} operating under the principles of a {{wpl|democratic republic}} which served with the intention of acting as a [[Public stewardship|public steward]]. | Orthodox Republicanism was originally formulated in the beginning stages by [[Aldona Szczepański]] and [[Krzysztof Baczyński]] during the [[Second Political Odrodzenie]] as an evolutionary branch of [[Common Good Government]]. This was precipitated by the [[Coronation of Mieszko VI]] and the re-establishment of the [[Second Noble Republic of Vistulzka]]. Baczyński brought [[Béla Edvárd]] and [[Yulia Tymoshenko]] in the development of Orthodox Republicanism during the formulation. The four of them were considered part of the [[New Era Vanguards]], and published the ''[[Testament of the States]]'' in 1909, the seminal work that served as the political and ideological basis for Orthodox Republicanism. It was defined by the ideas of {{wpl|progressivism|social progress}}, {{wpl|anti-imperialism|anti-colonialism}}, and {{wpl|Workers' self-management|autonomous labor management}} with a government operating under the principles of a {{wpl|democratic republic}} which served with the intention of acting as a [[Public stewardship|public steward]]. | ||
Orthodox Republicanism was further developed with the publication of ''[[Humanity and Individualism]]'' by Szczepański, which pushed the ideology closer right economically. Szczepański sought to distance the ideology from {{wpl|socialism}} and [[Delarueism]]. It sought to define the boundary of where the {{wpl|individualism|individual}} and {{wpl|human rights}} must be protected and to which point the state must step in. Szczepański also sought to distance the ideology from {{wpl|anarchism}} as a whole, believing that the central state was pivotal to preventing [[Redivergence]], or a return to undemocratic principles or to the collapse of order. | |||
Following the [[Vistulzkan Civil War]], Orthodox Republicanism began to branch out as many of the original founding members wrote independent manuscripts and manifestos as to the definition of Orthodox Republicanism, often conflicting with each other. [[Aldonism]], [[Edvárdism]], [[Baczyńskism]], and [[Tymoshenkoism]] were the characterizations of the different ideological views based on their independent manuscripts. The most predominant of these ideologies was [[Edvárdism]], where many of his ideals were adopted by the Orthodox Republican Party during the Civil War. [[Kovalenkoism]] was the developments of Orthodox Republicanism under the [[List of Presidents of Vistulzka|1st]] [[President of Vistulzka]] [[Bartholomew Kolavenko]]. Root Orthodoxy is the basis of Orthodox Republicanism that strictly describes the formulation of the ideology as it was in ''Testament of the States''. | Following the [[Vistulzkan Civil War]], Orthodox Republicanism began to branch out as many of the original founding members wrote independent manuscripts and manifestos as to the definition of Orthodox Republicanism, often conflicting with each other. [[Aldonism]], [[Edvárdism]], [[Baczyńskism]], and [[Tymoshenkoism]] were the characterizations of the different ideological views based on their independent manuscripts. The most predominant of these ideologies was [[Edvárdism]], where many of his ideals were adopted by the Orthodox Republican Party during the Civil War. [[Kovalenkoism]] was the developments of Orthodox Republicanism under the [[List of Presidents of Vistulzka|1st]] [[President of Vistulzka]] [[Bartholomew Kolavenko]]. Root Orthodoxy is the basis of Orthodox Republicanism that strictly describes the formulation of the ideology as it was in ''Testament of the States''. | ||
==Theory== | |||
===Aldonism=== | |||
{{main_article|Aldona Szczepański|Aldonism|Szczepański's Paradox}} | |||
Aldonism is the political theory that originates from [[Aldona Szczepański]] and her works, and is considered to be {{wpl|consequentialist}} interpretation of Orthodox Republicanism. It abandons certain principles that are retained in other political theory branches. The most poignant idea that conflicted with other theories is Szczepański's idea that a {{wpl|democratic republic}} is unsustainable in a free society, and that Redivergence is the largest threat not only to Orthodox Republicanism but also to the idea of {{wpl|individualism}}. [[Szczepański Paradox]] | |||
===Edvárdism=== | |||
{{main_article|Béla Edvárd|Edvárdism|Edvárdian Principles}} | |||
===Baczyńskism=== | |||
{{main_article|Krzysztof Baczyński|Baczyńskism}} | |||
===Tymoshenkoism=== | |||
{{main_article|Yulia Tymoshenkoism|Tymoshenkoism}} | |||
===Kolavenkoism=== | |||
{{main_article|Bartholomew Kolavenko|Kolavenkoism}} | |||
[[Category:Orthodox Republicanism]][[Category:New Republicanism]][[Category:New Republican Coalition]][[Category:Vistulzkan politics]][[Category:Ideologies (Teleon)]] | [[Category:Orthodox Republicanism]][[Category:New Republicanism]][[Category:New Republican Coalition]][[Category:Vistulzkan politics]][[Category:Ideologies (Teleon)]] |
Revision as of 23:36, 26 November 2024
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
Part of a series on |
Orthodox Republicanism |
---|
Orthodox Republicanism (Viswe: Prawosławny Republikanizm; Hetumogye: Ortodox Republikanizmus; Prykordonnyan: православний республіканізм) is a political, philosophy and economic ideology within the broader New Republican movement, characterized by the creation of an Orthodox Republic, a government system that is dedicated towards the advancement of the goals of individuals that regards social reform as its primary tool of social advancement. An Orthodox Republic primarily focuses on the promotion of human rights and social justice, while economically is considered to be centre-left. In its original form, it was considered to be closer to economic socialism however has since trended towards democratic capitalism during the 1930's. It has since become the governing ideology of the New Republican Coalition and the Orthodox Republic of Vistulzka.
Orthodox Republicanism was originally formulated in the beginning stages by Aldona Szczepański and Krzysztof Baczyński during the Second Political Odrodzenie as an evolutionary branch of Common Good Government. This was precipitated by the Coronation of Mieszko VI and the re-establishment of the Second Noble Republic of Vistulzka. Baczyński brought Béla Edvárd and Yulia Tymoshenko in the development of Orthodox Republicanism during the formulation. The four of them were considered part of the New Era Vanguards, and published the Testament of the States in 1909, the seminal work that served as the political and ideological basis for Orthodox Republicanism. It was defined by the ideas of social progress, anti-colonialism, and autonomous labor management with a government operating under the principles of a democratic republic which served with the intention of acting as a public steward.
Orthodox Republicanism was further developed with the publication of Humanity and Individualism by Szczepański, which pushed the ideology closer right economically. Szczepański sought to distance the ideology from socialism and Delarueism. It sought to define the boundary of where the individual and human rights must be protected and to which point the state must step in. Szczepański also sought to distance the ideology from anarchism as a whole, believing that the central state was pivotal to preventing Redivergence, or a return to undemocratic principles or to the collapse of order.
Following the Vistulzkan Civil War, Orthodox Republicanism began to branch out as many of the original founding members wrote independent manuscripts and manifestos as to the definition of Orthodox Republicanism, often conflicting with each other. Aldonism, Edvárdism, Baczyńskism, and Tymoshenkoism were the characterizations of the different ideological views based on their independent manuscripts. The most predominant of these ideologies was Edvárdism, where many of his ideals were adopted by the Orthodox Republican Party during the Civil War. Kovalenkoism was the developments of Orthodox Republicanism under the 1st President of Vistulzka Bartholomew Kolavenko. Root Orthodoxy is the basis of Orthodox Republicanism that strictly describes the formulation of the ideology as it was in Testament of the States.
Theory
Aldonism
Aldonism is the political theory that originates from Aldona Szczepański and her works, and is considered to be consequentialist interpretation of Orthodox Republicanism. It abandons certain principles that are retained in other political theory branches. The most poignant idea that conflicted with other theories is Szczepański's idea that a democratic republic is unsustainable in a free society, and that Redivergence is the largest threat not only to Orthodox Republicanism but also to the idea of individualism. Szczepański Paradox