Dominion (political theory) explained

In political theory, dominion (Latin: dominium) is the exercise of authority, possession, and/or domination.

Etymology

The term comes from Latin dominium, meaning "property, ownership", itself derived from Latin: dominus, "lord, master".[1]

In John Wyclif's thought

The term is particularly associated with the thought of John Wyclif, whose works De dominio divino libri tres ("three books on divine dominion") and Tractatus de civili dominio ("a discourse on civil domination") developed his concepts of divine dominion (Latin: dominium divinum) and civil dominion (Latin: dominium civilis). Wyclif argued that divine dominion determined the fundamentals of the existence of any created thing: all other kinds of power derived from divine dominion. In Wyclif's thought, humans were granted dominion by the grace of the Christian God. Prior to the Fall of Man, this dominion was absolute and he called it natural dominion. After the Fall, humans accessed only a more limited form of dominion, constrained by human sinfulness, such as individual humans' selfish desire to exercise exclusive ownership of property. Civil dominion was the dominion exercised by fallen humans over other humans or property.[2] [3] Wyclif's ideas were influential on Jan Hus and Hussite thought.

Notes and References

  1. Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. "dominion (n.)" (July 2023), .
  2. "Censorship in the Renaissance", in Encyclopedia of Renaissance Philosophy, ed. by Marco Sgarbi (Springer International Publishing, 2022), pp. 666-82; .
  3. Takashi Shogimen, "Wyclif, John", in Encyclopedia of Political Theory, Volume 1 ed, by Mark Bevir (SAGE Publications, 2010), pp. 1433-34.