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Fri Mar 31 17:19:04 2006 |
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Mary:
The OED entry on coercion includes to govern by force as the second
definition of the term, and cites as popular usage names like "The Coercion
Act". It dates this standard association of government & force to late
18c. Under coerce, the usage is pushed back to Butler in the mid 17th
century, though there it seems to be being used with a tone of
approval--not as the evil constraint on liberty so much as the necessary
constraint of the licentious. The OED datings are, I think, increasingly
regarded as suspect (indeed, there was a good deal of controversy about the
lack of revision in OED2), and so you could probably assume that the usage
is even older. Somewher, EPThompson comments with cryptic humour re the
OED that the first cuckoo often sang before the fact was recorded in the
Times. Either way, to address your question, the usage probably predates
economists. Though the shift from the (17c) right to constrain the errant
to the (19c) suspect restraint of "natural" freedoms presumably accompanied
the related economic debate. Of course, the term was used only to
distinguish some forms/acts of governance from others, but once you believe
that all government is the restraint of liberty by force, then govern and
coerce become synonymous.
Best wishes,
Paul
Paul Duguid
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