Modern nation-states exhibit a striking convergence in their age-based institutional thresholds:voting rights at 18, full criminal responsibility between 18-22, and mandatory educationconcluding around 18. This paper argues that these thresholds derive not from principledconsiderations of cognitive development or democratic theory, but from the military logic of thenineteenth-century nation-state, which required citizens whose "consumable value" to thestate–their capacity to be expended in warfare–peaked in early adulthood. Drawing on James C.Scott's concept of state legibility, I demonstrate how the construction of the "homogeneouscitizen" served administrative convenience rather than individual flourishing. I furtherdocument how protective regulations originally designed as ceilings against exploitation–suchas the eight-hour workday and retirement age–have been inverted into normative floors thatexclude those who cannot conform. Finally, I examine an asymmetric framework for politicalparticipation that distinguishes stakeholder rights from accountability requirements, and identifydimensions for institutional reconsideration–while acknowledging that specific reforms requiredemocratic deliberation this analysis can inform but not replace.
Ryuhei ISHIBASHI (Sat,) studied this question.