Polybius appears to have coined the term ochlocracy in his 2nd century BC work
Histories (6.4.6). He uses it to name the "pathological" version of popular rule, in opposition to the good version, which he refers to as democracy. There are numerous mentions of the word "ochlos" in the
Talmud, in which "ochlos" refers to anything from "mob", "populace", to "armed guard", as well as in the writings of
Rashi, a Jewish commentator on the Bible. The word was first recorded in English in 1584, derived from the
French ochlocratie (1568), which stems from the original Greek
okhlokratia, from
okhlos ("mob") and
kratos ("rule", "power", "strength"). Ancient Greek political thinkers regarded ochlocracy as one of the three "bad" forms of government (
tyranny,
oligarchy, and ochlocracy) as opposed to the three "good" forms of government:
monarchy,
aristocracy, and "
polity". They distinguished "good" and "bad" according to whether the government form would act in the interest of the whole community ("good") or in the exclusive interests of a group or individual at the expense of justice ("bad"). Polybius' predecessor,
Aristotle, distinguished between different forms of democracy, stating that those disregarding the
rule of law devolved into ochlocracy. Aristotle's teacher,
Plato, considered democracy itself to be a degraded form of government and the term is absent from his work. The threat of "mob rule" to a democracy is restrained by ensuring that the rule of law protects
minorities or individuals against short-term
demagoguery or
moral panic. However, considering how laws in a democracy are established or repealed by the majority, the protection of minorities by rule of law is questionable. Some authors, like the Bosnian political theoretician Jasmin Hasanović, connect the emergence of ochlocracy in democratic societies with the
decadence of democracy in
neo-liberal Western societies, in which "the democratic role of the people has been reduced mainly to the electoral process". ==History==