In an age of widespread democratic discontent, when the promise of "rule by the people" often feels like a distant ideal, Nicholas J. Pappas's The Few stages a conversation that is as timely as it is timeless. Through a lively and engaging philosophical dialogue, the book dares to ask a provocative question: What if aristocracy isn't the antiquated evil we assume it to be? What if, in some form, it offers a remedy to the mediocrity and oligarchic capture that plague modern societies?
The discussion unfolds between two friends: a successful, pragmatic Lawyer and a thoughtful, probing Director. The Lawyer, weary of a system where shamelessness and the pursuit of the bottom line have replaced a genuine love of excellence, becomes a passionate advocate for a new ruling class. This isn't your ancestor's aristocracy of inherited titles and land, but a meritocracy of "the few" who are selected for their virtue, superior education, refinement, and dedication to the art of rule. He argues that such a class, freed from the economic anxieties that constrain the masses, could devote themselves to achieving the highest forms of human excellence, cultivating beauty, and providing a stable, honorable governance that benefits all.
The Director, playing the role of the skeptical philosopher, masterfully challenges these grand notions. He pushes the Lawyer to confront the uncomfortable practicalities of his vision. How would this class be chosen? How would it maintain power without descending into tyranny? Their conversation unflinchingly explores the dark corollaries of this ideal, from the necessity of censorship and the creation of a separate culture for the rulers, to the use of fear and mythology to manage the populace. They wrestle with the nature of fame, power, property, and what it truly means to live an excellent life. Written in Pappas's signature accessible yet serious style, The Few is not a polemic but a profound and playful exploration. It doesn't offer easy answers but instead provides a bracing intellectual exercise, forcing readers to reconsider their deepest assumptions about justice, equality, and the purpose of the state. It is an essential read for anyone who believes that the fundamental questions of political philosophy are not settled relics of the past, but living dilemmas we must continually confront.