登陆注册
15754400000011

第11章

Now, just as the earliest account of the nature of the progress of humanity is to be found in Plato, so in him we find the first explicit attempt to found a universal philosophy of history upon wide rational grounds. Having created an ideally perfect state, the philosopher proceeds to give an elaborate theory of the complex causes which produce revolutions, of the moral effects of various forms of government and education, of the rise of the criminal classes and their connection with pauperism, and, in a word, to create history by the deductive method and to proceed from A PRIORIpsychological principles to discover the governing laws of the apparent chaos of political life.

There have been many attempts since Plato to deduce from a single philosophical principle all the phenomena which experience subsequently verifies for us. Fichte thought he could predict the world-plan from the idea of universal time. Hegel dreamed he had found the key to the mysteries of life in the development of freedom, and Krause in the categories of being. But the one scientific basis on which the true philosophy of history must rest is the complete knowledge of the laws of human nature in all its wants, its aspirations, its powers and its tendencies: and this great truth, which Thucydides may be said in some measure to have apprehended, was given to us first by Plato.

Now, it cannot be accurately said of this philosopher that either his philosophy or his history is entirely and simply A PRIORI. ONEST DE SON SIECLE MEME QUAND ON Y PROTESTE, and so we find in him continual references to the Spartan mode of life, the Pythagorean system, the general characteristics of Greek tyrannies and Greek democracies. For while, in his account of the method of forming an ideal state, he says that the political artist is indeed to fix his gaze on the sun of abstract truth in the heavens of the pure reason, but is sometimes to turn to the realisation of the ideals on earth: yet, after all, the general character of the Platonic method, which is what we are specially concerned with, is essentially deductive and A PRIORI. And he himself, in the building up of his Nephelococcygia, certainly starts with a [Greek text which cannot be reproduced], making a clean sweep of all history and all experience; and it was essentially as an A PRIORItheorist that he is criticised by Aristotle, as we shall see later.

To proceed to closer details regarding the actual scheme of the laws of political revolutions as drawn out by Plato, we must first note that the primary cause of the decay of the ideal state is the general principle, common to the vegetable and animal worlds as well as to the world of history, that all created things are fated to decay - a principle which, though expressed in the terms of a mere metaphysical abstraction, is yet perhaps in its essence scientific. For we too must hold that a continuous redistribution of matter and motion is the inevitable result of the nominal persistence of Force, and that perfect equilibrium is as impossible in politics as it certainly is in physics.

The secondary causes which mar the perfection of the Platonic 'city of the sun' are to be found in the intellectual decay of the race consequent on injudicious marriages and in the Philistine elevation of physical achievements over mental culture; while the hierarchical succession of Timocracy and Oligarchy, Democracy and Tyranny, is dwelt on at great length and its causes analysed in a very dramatic and psychological manner, if not in that sanctioned by the actual order of history.

And indeed it is apparent at first sight that the Platonic succession of states represents rather the succession of ideas in the philosophic mind than any historical succession of time.

Aristotle meets the whole simply by an appeal to facts. If the theory of the periodic decay of all created things, he urges, be scientific, it must be universal, and so true of all the other states as well as of the ideal. Besides, a state usually changes into its contrary and not to the form next to it; so the ideal state would not change into Timocracy; while Oligarchy, more often than Tyranny, succeeds Democracy. Plato, besides, says nothing of what a Tyranny would change to. According to the cycle theory it ought to pass into the ideal state again, but as a fact one Tyranny is changed into another as at Sicyon, or into a Democracy as at Syracuse, or into an Aristocracy as at Carthage. The example of Sicily, too, shows that an Oligarchy is often followed by a Tyranny, as at Leontini and Gela. Besides, it is absurd to represent greed as the chief motive of decay, or to talk of avarice as the root of Oligarchy, when in nearly all true oligarchies money-making is forbidden by law. And finally the Platonic theory neglects the different kinds of democracies and of tyrannies.

Now nothing can be more important than this passage in Aristotle's POLITICS (v. 12.), which may he said to mark an era in the evolution of historical criticism. For there is nothing on which Aristotle insists so strongly as that the generalisations from facts ought to be added to the data of the A PRIORI method - a principle which we know to be true not merely of deductive speculative politics but of physics also: for are not the residual phenomena of chemists a valuable source of improvement in theory?

His own method is essentially historical though by no means empirical. On the contrary, this far-seeing thinker, rightly styled IL MAESTRO DI COLOR CHE SANNO, may be said to have apprehended clearly that the true method is neither exclusively empirical nor exclusively speculative, but rather a union of both in the process called Analysis or the Interpretation of Facts, which has been defined as the application to facts of such general conceptions as may fix the important characteristics of the phenomena, and present them permanently in their true relations.

同类推荐
  • 周易参同契注·储华谷

    周易参同契注·储华谷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Maid Marian

    Maid Marian

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 存韩

    存韩

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 戊壬录

    戊壬录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 略论安乐净土义

    略论安乐净土义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 诡禁术之复仇气球

    诡禁术之复仇气球

    一个小镇上,一间荒废已久的商店!店主莫名的离去留下一个白色的气球!上面留下“我会回来找你们的!”一个外来汗进入了这个商店又会发生什么事情呢?商店背后隐藏了什么不可告人的秘密~~~敬请收看《诡禁术之复仇气球》。
  • 你是我的小情歌

    你是我的小情歌

    大学刚毕业的唐萌萌,看起来迷迷糊糊而且很迟钝,但是很多事其实都看在了眼里,只是和自己无关便无视掉了。嗜好贪睡,因为这个嗜好正在到处求职,想找到一个工作时间少,工资只要能养活自己的工作,最后却被端木风凌坑蒙拐骗的签下了结婚申请书。反应过来后发挥了聪明的一面,却被端木风凌将计就计,外加“可以睡个够”的条件蒙住了心智,乖乖点头答应了。
  • 魔兽之圣白王座

    魔兽之圣白王座

    这是个穿越到艾泽拉斯世界,成为阿尔萨斯的兄弟,师从阿隆索斯·法奥的牧师故事——金发的幼狮在原野中成长,命运的走向因石子而转折,不被看好的孩子加冕为王,步履蹒跚的凡人演绎传说。(本书使用的是TRPG设定,类似DND,考据党请轻拍)
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 大道风云

    大道风云

    大道无形,生育天地;大道无情,运行日月;大道无名,长养万物。陈青锋不知何以为道,也不求道,他只想在这风云变幻的星辰大陆活下去……
  • 龙灵通知

    龙灵通知

    有许多的网址都有我的作品但是我和你们说啊,还是要支持原版的创世中文网啊。
  • EXO的小助理

    EXO的小助理

    她的父亲是时尚圈著名编辑,哥哥是世界顶级设计师,她不愁吃穿,但却一心想成为EXO的助理,于是她独自一人来到了韩国
  • 猎美至尊

    猎美至尊

    人不风流枉少年,看叶云如何成为一名猎美高手。校花、女警、美女教师……各色各样的美女相伴,只不过是叶云生活中的调味剂。他渐渐的发现,地下世界、隐世家族、修武门派、西方教廷……只不过是一些宵小之辈,原来有一个更大的实力组织,正在逐步摧毁他的人生,叶云只能不断提升实力,以此逍遥人世间。
  • 薄荷微凉SweetLove

    薄荷微凉SweetLove

    他曾是她最美好的愿望,可她也并不是没有信仰,只是再也找不到一个可以让她相信的人,等她回过头时才发现,曾经的少年早已消失在茫茫人海中,与她形同陌路。只是她不知道,她一直是那个少年最挂念的人。
  • 卡片世纪

    卡片世纪

    在这里,没有其他的力量只有无限的卡片,一个卡片的世界,在这里,卡片决定着你的命运,决定这你的一生。