The Idea of Progress: An Inguiry into Its Origin and Growth. J. B. Bury

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       J. B. Bury

      The Idea of Progress: An Inguiry into Its Origin and Growth

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664635242

       INTRODUCTION

       CHAPTER I. SOME INTERPRETATIONS OF UNIVERSAL HISTORY: BODIN AND LE ROY

       1.

       CHAPTER II. UTILITY THE END OF KNOWLEDGE: BACON

       1.

       CHAPTER III. CARTESIANISM

       CHAPTER IV. THE DOCTRINE OF DEGENERATION: THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS

       1.

       CHAPTER V. THE PROGRESS OF KNOWLEDGE: FONTENELLE

       1.

       CHAPTER VI. THE GENERAL PROGRESS OF MAN: ABBE DE SAINT-PIERRE

       CHAPTER VII. NEW CONCEPTIONS OF HISTORY: MONTESQUIEU, VOLTAIRE, TURGOT

       CHAPTER VIII. THE ENCYCLOPAEDISTS AND ECONOMISTS

       1.

       CHAPTER IX. WAS CIVILISATION A MISTAKE? ROUSSEAU, CHASTELLUX. 1.

       CHAPTER X. THE YEAR 2440

       1.

       CHAPTER XI. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: CONDORCET

       I.

       CHAPTER XII. THE THEORY OF PROGRESS IN ENGLAND

       1.

       CHAPTER XIII. GERMAN SPECULATIONS ON PROGRESS

       1.

       CHAPTER XIV. CURRENTS OF THOUGHT IN FRANCE AFTER THE REVOLUTION

       1.

       CHAPTER XV. THE SEARCH FOR A LAW OF PROGRESS

       I. SAINT-SIMON

       CHAPTER XVI. THE SEARCH FOR A LAW OF PROGRESS: II. COMTE

       1.

       CHAPTER XVII. "PROGRESS" IN THE FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT (1830-1851)

       1.

       CHAPTER XVIII. MATERIAL PROGRESS: THE EXHIBITION OF 1851

       1.

       CHAPTER XIX. PROGRESS IN THE LIGHT OF EVOLUTION

       1.

       EPILOGUE

       Table of Contents

      When we say that ideas rule the world, or exercise a decisive power in history, we are generally thinking of those ideas which express human aims and depend for their realisation on the human will, such as liberty, toleration, equality of opportunity, socialism. Some of these have been partly realised, and there is no reason why any of them should not be fully realised, in a society or in the world, if it were the united purpose of a society or of the world to realise it. They are approved or condemned because they are held to be good or bad, not because they are true or false. But there is another order of ideas that play a great part in determining and directing the course of man's conduct but do not depend on his will—ideas which bear upon the mystery of life, such as Fate, Providence, or personal immortality. Such ideas may operate in important ways on the forms of social action, but they involve a question of fact and they are accepted or rejected not because they are believed to be useful or injurious, but because they are believed to be true or false.

      The idea of the progress of humanity is an idea of this kind, and it is important to be quite clear on the point. We now take it so much for granted, we are so conscious of constantly progressing in knowledge, arts, organising capacity, utilities of all sorts, that it is easy to look upon Progress as an aim, like liberty or a world-federation, which it only depends on our own efforts and good-will to achieve. But though all increases of power and knowledge depend on human effort, the idea of the Progress of humanity, from which all these particular progresses derive their value, raises a definite question of fact, which man's wishes or labours cannot affect any more than his wishes or labours can prolong life beyond the grave.

      This idea means that civilisation has moved, is moving, and will move in a desirable direction. But in order to judge that we are moving in a desirable direction we should have to know precisely what the destination is. To the minds of most people the desirable outcome of human development would be a condition of society in which all the inhabitants


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