Philophies of History
Philosophies of History
Philosophy is current in everyday
life. It has the meaning illustrated by Tolstoy’s remark that everyone must
have a philosophy of life’ that is some general presuppositions, which they
should always be ready to scrutinize. Philosophies about history are seeking to
clarify its operational presuppositions because a coherent thought can emerge
only out of some presupposition or constellation of presuppositions as R.G.
Collingwood puts it.
The concept of Philosophies of
History emerged with the French rationalist philosopher Voltaire. It assumed
prominence when philosophers lay their seeds in the fields of history.
Historians before the 19th century were generally indifferent to the idea
of ‘Philosophy of History’. The German historian Leopold Von Ranke believed
that ‘divine providence would take care of the meaning of the history if the
historian took care of the facts’. The Swiss historian, Burckhardt observed
that ‘we are not initiated into the purposes of the eternal wisdom’. G.M.
Trevelyan wrote that ‘there was no philosophy in history. Philosophy must be
brought to history; it cannot be extracted from it’. On the whole the 19th century
as E.H. Carr wrote in ‘What is History’, was ‘the age of innocence and
historians walked in the garden of Eden, without a scarp of philosophy to cover
them, naked and unashamed before the God of history’.
Philosophy of history is a
philosophical view of human destiny. As Allan Nevins wrote in ‘The Gateway to
History’, ‘a philosophy of history springs from a writer's whole view of human
destiny and thus embodies his philosophy of life; an interpretation of
historical material is merely a writers explanation of the significance of a
series of events, an epoch or a movement. The one usually bears a close
relation to the thought of the age; the other is usually more personal in
origin’.
All major philosophies of
history, except two (the Greco-Roman and the Medieval Church Historiography),
have sprung up in the past three centuries, a fact that speaks volumes of the
close co-operation between rationalism and modern history. Ancient Greek and
Roman writers knew but only one philosophy – the philosophy of fate. The
ancient Indians too believed in a similar philosophy – the philosophy of Karma.
I. The Cyclical View – the first
widespread interpretation in western culture was the dominant philosophy from
Herodotus to the time of Christ. All human events occur in cycles. Names,
dates, and persons may change, but philosophically what happened before will
happen again. This applies to nation-states and to epochs and gave birth to the
adage that ‘history repeats itself’. This theory was the first known philosophy
and ruled out the possibility of development and change.
II. The Providential Theory – existed in
the Old Testament era widely accepted during the church-oriented middle ages.
History was the guidance of divine will. Divine will be directing the destinies
of mankind according to the cosmic order. Events, actions, and happenings were
explained in terms of an intervening divine providence. The man had no control
over his environment. Christian historians, following the lead given by
Eusebius of Caesarea (260-340) and St. Augustine of Hippo (354-430) coupled the
Hebrew idea that divinity directed historical process, with the Greek notion
that man could arrive at an understanding of this process through the use of
his intellect. This philosophy of history held sway for more than thirteen
centuries. It was championed by St. Augustine in his famous book ‘The City of
God’. According to him, history is a constant conflict between the City of God
and City of Man. He contrasted the secular state (evil and transitory) with the
kingdom of God (serene and eternal). He notes that these two cities are
inextricably interwoven and it is this interaction that actively produces
history. The City of Man and the City of God will not be separated until ‘the
last judgment’. The task of historical study is ‘to trace the steps by which
one is slowly replaced by or transformed into the other’. These views
constituted the Christian historical approach and held sway over the middle
Ages and shaped the course of Christian historical thought.
III. Another
philosophy that gives great importance to individuals as decisive players in
history is the ‘Great Man Theory’ of Thomas Carlyle (1881). According
to the proponents of this theory, all major developments of human history are
accounted for by the ‘Great Man’ who exerts an almost superhuman control over
the fate of their generations. Thomas Carlyle says that ‘history is nothing but
the biography of great men’, and that it is a record of human accomplishment,
particularly of great souls. Human progress is regarded as being primarily due
to the work of geniuses who appear in the world from time to time. In the words
of Carl G. Gustafson, ‘they have been able to master the circumstances of their
times and re mould them according to their own ideas’. What history requires
according to Carlyle is geniuses and not masses.
After Renaissance, in the age of enlightenment, rationalist
like Voltaire (1694-1778) loosened the grip of the old supernatural and
religious beliefs over history. Influenced by humanism, they demonstrated that
men really made their own world. They as Allan Nevins pointed out firmly
believed that the historians, casting aside the murky lanterns of the religious
chronicles should reconstruct the past under the brilliant light of reason. The
new scientific attitude towards history was strikingly exhibited by Voltaire.
His brilliant expositions helped to open the way for other rationalistic
philosophies. To Voltaire, the philosophy of history stood for critical and
independent thinking in which the historian exercised his on the mind.
IV. The
progress view of history which is the outcome of the renaissance and a new
set of values it generated stated that the human race was continuously
progressing. This theory of history formulated by Gottfried Leibnitz (1726)
held that the human race was continually getting better and better, it was
became more civilized with the passage of each new generation.
V. After
Voltaire, the same phrase, ‘philosophy of history’ was used by several
historians including, George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831). They,
however, meant entirely different things by the same phrase. For Hegel, the
whole of human history is a process through which mankind is making spiritual
and moral progress. History has a plot and the philosopher’s task is to
discover it. Hegel’s determinism entailed the unification of
opposites – spirit and nature, universal and particular, ideal and real. The
combination of these two would result in a synthesis. He stood both for
idealism and realism at once. Hegel developed his ‘dialectical system’ in which
logic, nature, and mind figured prominently. It begins by laying down a
positive thesis that is at once negative by an anti-thesis, then further
thought produces the synthesis. To Hegel, man has conscious which produces
rational will. This rational will is at the root of human institutions and
human history. To Hegel, philosophy of history proposes a new kind of history,
it is not a philosophical reflection on history, but history itself raised to a
higher power and higher plane where it becomes philosophical as distinct from
merely empirical. As Collingwood puts it, it is a new kind of ‘history not
merely ascertained as so much fact but understood by apprehending the reasons
why the facts happened as they did. This philosophical history will exhibit
progress from primitive times to the civilization of to-day.
VI. In the 19th century,
another group of historians called the Positivists emerged. They believed in
the positivist philosophy of Augusta Comte (1798-1857). Scholars like
Herbert Spencer, Karl Marx, and others belonged to this school. By philosophy
of history, the positivist meant
(a) Ascertaining facts
(b) Framing laws.
The historian was to ascertain facts through sensuous
perception and then framing laws through generalization. Under this influence,
a new kind of historiography arose called positivist historiography. ‘The
historical process’ as R.G. Collingwood (1889-1943) says ‘for the positivists,
was in kind identical with the natural process, and that was why the methods of
natural sciences were applicable to the interpretation of history’. Social and
historical phenomena were also subject to certain ascertainable laws and open
to treatment as in the case of natural sciences.
VII. The Italian Benedetto
Croce (1866-1952) was a protagonist of another current of history – Relativism,
along with the German, Dilthey. They argued that history is present knowledge,
which must and does spring from current interests. To them, history is
‘contemporary thoughts about the past’. They also held the view that there is
no one truth about the past but innumerable truths as many as there are
perspectives. Their belief was ‘we see different pasts at different times, and
what we see depends on our present situation.
VIII. Philosophy
of history has grown over the ages assuming more abstract and sophisticated forms. Karl
Marx put forward a comprehensive philosophy of history based on economic
determinism. Marxism was a philosophy of history impregnated by an elaborate
economic theory. History has governed by laws which the human mind can
recognize or determine. Objective historical necessity was at the roots of
causation. Economic developments are basis to social changes. Ideas,
institutions, laws, politics and even religion and art are greatly affected by
economic factors. Ideas influences history, but they are not independent
agents, only intermediary links. All historical progress is a product of a
conflict between the old and new, leading to the higher social formations.
These would always be a clash of interests among the social groups, which Marx
calls ‘Class Struggle’. Class struggle is a great motivating power of history.
Progress will always be the result of a victory of the new class over its
oppressors. The struggle will go on until the last vestiges of the old order
disappear. ‘Dictatorship of the proletariat’ would result from this repression.
Karl Marx defined ‘value’ as labour crystallized. Labour power is the only
power that can produce a ‘value’ greater than its own. The product of ‘surplus
labour’ is ‘surplus value’. Originality of Marx lies in his efforts to
synthesize the entire legacy of social knowledge since Aristotle. To Marx,
history was the development of man’s efforts to master the forces of nature and
hence of production. History is progress. Man’s ability to produce continually
increases.
IX. Oswald
Spengler (1880-1936) was a philosopher historian of Germany. Spengler
compared the modern western civilizations with the ancient Greeco-Roman
civilizations and endeavoured to discern the outlines of a life cycle through
which he believed all civilizations must pass. Spengler substituted the
historical idea of progress by the cyclical concept of natural
sciences. Spengler’s reputation rests entirely on his work ‘The Decline of the
West’. Spengler dismissed as an illusion, the idea of progress in history. His
cyclical theory of human development and his scepticism about man’s ethical
potentialities made him reject the idea of progress. Spengler compared human
culture to the life cycles of human beings.
X. Arnold Toynbee’s (1889-1975)
work, ‘A Study of History’ has been acclaimed as the greatest single handed
historical achievement since Gibbon’s ‘Decline and fall of the Roman Empire’.
In his monumental work he has examined the genesis, growth and decay of all the
civilizations of mankind. He studies the genesis, growth and decay of 26
related and unrelated civilizations. Geographical factors alone do not
determine the birth of cultures. Two factors are indispensable, one is dynamic
leadership of a creative minority and secondly a set of circumstances that are
neither too favourable nor too unfavourable, but just right in proportion. This
is followed by a mechanism called ‘Challenge and Response’. Birth of a
civilization is the product of the interplay of challenges and responses.
Challenge poses an issue and response offers the solution. Civilizations grow
due to the progressive and cumulative inward self-direction or self-articulation
of the civilization. Secret of progress was what Toynbee calls ‘Eternalization’,
which means spiritual purification. Decay caused by :
(a) failure of creative power in the leadership
(b) withdrawal on the part of the society and
(c) consequent loss of social unity. Declining phase consists of
(1) Break down of the civilization
(2) Disintegration and
(3) Dissolution.
XI. Herbert
Spencer held that history was a movement from the homogeneous to the
heterogeneous, from simple tribal systems to complex urban cultures. It has
been labelled the evolution model. Spencer emphasized gradual and
cumulative social change (evolution as opposed to revolution). It was
essentially determined from within and described in terms of structural
differentiation. Durkheim and Weber largely followed this trend in spite of
serious differences.



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