All right. I messed up on the term republic. It's a lot more vauge than I let on. Hence, the defining terms such as "federal republic", or "representative republic", etc. Nonetheless, that does not diminish the literal definition of the term "democracy."
Now, as for Sci's assertion that it is the "accepted" term for our sort of society
I did not claim that "democracy" is the accepted term for our society. I said that the term "
liberal democracy" is the accepted technical term in the field of Political Science for our society.
Not in Political Science.
And yet, he asserts that that it is not applicable--that technically, the US is more properly a "multinational state".
I am simply making a similar literal-minded statement. While "democracy" is accepted as meaning "free society", it literally means complete majority rule.
Which would matter if I had used the term "democracy." I did not. I used the term "
liberal democracy." The term "
liberal democracy" is
an entirely separate concept from the term "democracy."
It is, as I noted,
the standard technical term for a republic -- or, now that I think of it, a constitutional monarchy -- that is built on the principles of classical liberalism (i.e., the rule of law, free and fair elections, human rights, etc.). "
liberal democracy" is not a mere adjectival modification of the term "democracy."
You are arguing against a term I never used.
Furthermore, the fact that the United States uses
elected non-monarchs as its rulers means that it is both a republic
and a democracy. The two systems are not mutually incompatible.