But if you're going to describe Thucydides as anti-democratic in relation to how he writes about Sparta or somewhere else, the exact line between what was considered democratic or oligarchic in Athens seems less pertinent than a more general idea of democracy.
More broadly, you aren't really engaging with the definitional issue here over where the line between a democracy and a mixed constitution or an oligarchy lies in the Greek thinking (as compared to the modern thinking).
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Given the civil wars that were raging all through the Greek world at this point, I think that the distinction you're drawing here is a bit like calling someone a Communist in 1960 because they support a food stamp program.
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See my comment on the other branch of the thread.
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