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Absolutist

An absolutist is a adherent of absolutism, a political doctrine that emphasizes centralized, unchecked sovereign authority. In early modern Europe, absolutists argued that the ruler’s power should be supreme and not constrained by parliaments, estates, or constitutional limits, often invoking divine right or perceived necessity of strong government. Rulers commonly cited as emblematic figures include Louis XIV of France, Peter the Great of Russia, and Frederick William I of Prussia, who built centralized bureaucracies, controlled taxation, and subordinated regional nobles to the state.

Absolutism is distinct from constitutionalism and the rule of law, though in practice the reach of power

The term absolutist also appears in ethics, referring to moral absolutism—the view that certain actions are

varied.
Critics
argued
that
unlimited
authority
threatened
liberty
and
accountability,
and
could
foster
autocratic
governance.
The
approach
declined
in
many
countries
during
the
late
18th
and
early
19th
centuries
as
Enlightenment
ideas
and
revolutions
promoted
legal
limits
on
power
and
constitutional
frameworks.
universally
right
or
wrong
regardless
of
context
or
consequences.
Moral
absolutists
maintain
the
existence
of
fixed,
objective
moral
truths
that
apply
everywhere,
which
is
a
separate
sense
from
political
absolutism
and
a
central
topic
in
metaethics
and
normative
ethics.