I have (severe) misgivings about the Hamlet example. While it alludes to the difficulty of holding offices in general, I doubt the speech was referring to a democratically elected office, and the speech seems to refer more to the abuses a leader goes through rather than a systems flaws. Thoughts?
For the moment, I have kept it, but I have left it off the works page of Hamlet.
I have (severe) misgivings about the Hamlet example. While it alludes to the difficulty of holding offices in general, I doubt the speech was referring to a democratically elected office, and the speech seems to refer more to the abuses a leader goes through rather than a systems flaws. Thoughts?
For the moment, I have kept it, but I have left it off the works page of Hamlet.
Edited by GameChainsaw The term "Great Man" is disturbingly interchangeable with "mass murderer" in history books.