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My Take on History

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Daniel James Sanchez Posted: Fri, Sep 25 2009 11:58 PM

Hi all.  I've been super busy with work and personal stuff, so, much to my regret, I haven't been able to participate in the interesting discussions going on of late.  But I have managed to squeeze in enough time here and there in the past couple of weeks to write a 4,000+ word piece summarizing my view of the political history of the west (if anybody's read it already on my blog before today, it's been expanded a good deal).

Of course with such a short piece covering so many centuries, major episodes often only get a mention (if that).  At the same time, with such a sweeping topic, I don't know if it would be focused enough to qualify as a potential Mises Daily.  But I'd like to get feedback from all you well-read folk all the same.  Thanks in advance.

"the obligation to justice is founded entirely on the interests of society, which require mutual abstinence from property" -David Hume
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http://www.reddit.com/r/reddit.com/comments/9o8ed/society_versus_state_in_seven_epochs/

"When you're young you worry about people stealing your ideas, when you're old you worry that they won't." - David Friedman
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Thanks for the submit, LS.  Yes

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Made some revisions and added a couple more images...

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Excellent work Lilburne.  Very clear and concise and I really like your definitions of the epochs.

In the name of constructive criticism:

  • Maybe you could emphasise that recognition of private property was a key development of The Old Freedom, particularly in land.  Recognition of land ownership was a prerequisite for agriculture.
  • Maybe you could mention globalization trends: something like "The prosperity of The New Freedom epoch led to an increase in long-distance trade, facilitated by an international gold standard.  But in the Third Intermediate Period, this globalization of trade translated into an internationalization of government and fiat currencies.  Regional political institutions such as the EU, NATO, AU, and ASEAN and global institutions such as the UN, World Bank, IMF, WTO, WHO, and the ICC have come to play an increasingly important role in world affairs.  The inherent tendency for governments to centralize, driven by popular support for democracy and equality of wealth, logically culminates in the establishment of a global fiat currency and a global government."
  • I think the internet should get a mention in the Future Freedom section.  The internet is the reason the ideas of Mises, Rothbard and Paul have reached such a large audience.  There are also many other ways the internet may be the downfall of both Throne and Altar (see this post by AJ).
  • It would be helpful to list the seven epochs in bullet-points in the introduction.
  • Typo: "In the 16th century, Henry VIII drove the Catholic Church out of France to expropriate its wealth and set up his own state church."  Obviously you mean England.

Again, great work - I've always been interested in how different historians define epochs and your scheme makes more sense than any other I have seen.

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Thanks, TL.  Great suggestions!

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Lilburne, it's a very good piece.

The only suggestion I would make is this: for a survey of this kind, some references would be welcome. You should add a list of books or articles that have helped form your understanding of the history you summarize. The purpose would be twofold: 1) you would give some poor historically illiterate sod like me a start on pursuing the subject if he fell upon your essay and liked it; 2) you would be warranting to the reader that you had delved into the subject more deeply than skimming Wikipedia articles, and thus were not simply a crank, spouting off from the top of his head. Number two is important to help persuade a maximal number of readers who stumble upon the article, since it is at least potentially an effort in persuasion, rather than just preachment to the choir.

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twelveguage:
2) you would be warranting to the reader that you had delved into the subject more deeply than skimming Wikipedia articles, and thus were not simply a crank, spouting off from the top of his head.

Good points, twelveguage.  Rest assured, I'm no Wikicrank.  Here are the books I've read which informed the piece.  I'll reference these in footnotes per your suggestion.

 

  • History Begins at Sumer by Samuel Noah Kramer (350 page)
  • Ancient Iraq by Georges Roux (428 pages)
  • Penguin Atlases (about half of the pages of which are text, the other half maps) of Ancient History (120 pages), , Medieval History (106 pages), Modern History (90 pages), and Recent History (108 pages), all by Colin McEvedy
  • Penguin Historical Atlas of Ancient Egypt (131 pages)
  • A History of the Middle Ages by Crane Brinton, John Christopher, and Robert Wolff (19 hour audiobook)
  • Charlemagne: From the Hammer to the Cross by Richard Winston (14.5 hour audiobook)
  • How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization by Thomas Woods (225 pages)
  • The Medieval Machine by Jean Gimpel (252 pages)
  • Medieval Feudalism by Carl Stephenson (2.5 hour audiobook)
  • The Crusades by Richard A. Newhall (5 hour audiobook)
  • A Distant Mirror by Barbara Tuchman: The Calamitous 14th Century (700 pages)
  • The Italian Renaissance by J.H. Plumb (6 hour audiobook)
  • The Reformation by George L. Mosse (5 hour audiobook)
  • The Age of Louis XIV by Laurence Bradford Packard (4.5 hour audiobook)
  • Europe Under the Old Regime by Albert Sorel (3 hour audiobook)
  • A History of Britain by Simon Schama, Volume I (8 hour audiobook)
  • Conceived in Liberty by Murray Rothbard Volume I (511 pages), Volume II (268 pages), Volume III (the first 245 pages) (I haven't read Volume IV yet)
  • The Enlightened Despots by Geoffrey Bruun (4.75 hour audiobook)
  • The French Revolution by Leo Gershoy (3.5 hour audiobook)
  • How Capitalism Saved America by Thomas DiLorenzo (256 pages)
  • Modern and Contemporary European History by J. Salwyn Schapiro (825 pages)
  • Europe Since 1815 by Mitchell Garrett and James Godfrey (750 pages)
  • The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Great Depression and the New Deal by Robert Murphy (177 pages)

 

I'm omitting a lot, because I'm tired of typing: particularly ancient history texts.  Also, since I don't talk about classical antiquity (Greece and Rome) much in my piece, I've omitted what I've read on that subject.  However, classical literature and history is actually somewhat of a specialty of mine.

Sorry if this is overkill, or if it seems like bragging.  I just don't want people to think I'm a crank.

EDIT: Forgot some key American history works...

John Adams by David McCullough (30 hour audiobook)

Thomas Jefferson and His Time by Dumas Malone, 6 volumes, (102 hour audiobook)

Andrew Jackson: His Life and Times by H.W. Brands (26 hour audiobook)

"the obligation to justice is founded entirely on the interests of society, which require mutual abstinence from property" -David Hume
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EDIT above.  Forgot some key American history works.

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Lilburne:

Conceived in Liberty by Murray Rothbard ... (I haven't read Volume IV yet)

Slacker. Smile

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Zavoi replied on Sun, Sep 27 2009 5:01 PM

The popular belief is that the Middle Ages were a dark age of barbarism and religious repression, and it was only with the Renaissance that civilization and advancement picked up where antiquity had left off. So when you say

Lilburne:
After the centuries of phenomenal economic growth called the High Middle Ages, the 14th century was a time of retrogression, and the 15th and 16th centuries were times of relative stagnation.

people are going to want additional supporting evidence (citations, statistics, etc.) before they'll believe it. Otherwise, they might just write off this article as the work of a crank (which I don't think it is).

Also, in this passage:

Lilburne:
northern Mesopotamian villages overrun by Sumerian armies; Beoetian villages overrun by Theban phalanxes, Gallic villages overrun by Roman legions, Saxon villages overrun by Carolingian knights.

you cover about 3000 years of history in one fell swoop. Is there anything worth mentioning about the fall of the Roman Empire? Do you think that the "campaign of conquest" pattern continued uninterrupted throughout Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages? I would think that the fall of the Western Empire, as well as the Early Middle Ages, deserve mention: In contrast to the continued existence of the Byzantine Empire, Western Europe had a period of several centuries where there was an "altar" but no "throne" to speak of (of course, there were kings and warlords, but no states in the modern sense). It's likely that this contributed to the political fragmentation you mention in "The Middle Freedom."

Although, I don't claim to be an expert on these matters, so I'll defer to you if anything I said was incorrect.

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"Sorry if this is overkill, or if it seems like bragging.  I just don't want people to think I'm a crank."

Not at all. It's exactly the right stuff. More power to you.

My humble blog

It's easy to refute an argument if you first misrepresent it. William Keizer

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Okay, I just added my sources with 48 references.  Phew.  That's a lot of HTML <sup> tags to type...

I just wish there was an easy way to automatically renumber my footnotes whenever I add a new one...

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Lilburne:
I just wish there was an easy way to automatically renumber my footnotes whenever I add a new one...

A word processor like msWord or OpenOffice Writer, could do auto-footnote numbering. and then you could export the document to html

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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The only thing with that is programs like that tend to add a bunch of junk code...

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lol, you ain't kidding!.

you could do a raw text paste (i.e. of just the numbers next to your footnotes (and the footnotes), into a plain text editor, like notepad, and then into your html editor, that way you are just manipulating plain text as you are used to.) obviously it wont help you in this project as its a done deal, but in the future if you anticipate you will have lots of footnotes in an article and you do feel it will be a pain to number the notes, its an idea.

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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That's a good idea, thanks!

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http://www.latex-project.org/

Takes a while to learn this stuff, but it's very useful. (especially if you're putting in mathematical expressions) It's what most researchers in computer science use. The bib files are really neat as you can use them to store your references.

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I thought that the piece was very interesting and informative. Only thing I don't understand is the description of the high middle ages as a time of freedom. I know that centralized states were very weak at this point weren't local feudalist states just as tyranical as any large centralized state?
"Lo! I am weary of my wisdom, like the bee that hath gathered too much honey; I need hands outstretched to take it." -Thus Spake Zarathustra
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The Late Andrew Ryan:
I know that centralized states were very weak at this point weren't local feudalist states just as tyranical as any large centralized state?

No, the near-non-existence of chattel slavery alone is enough to tip the scales in favor of medieval western society.  Also, the common image of the nobility as between the crown and the peasants "as the hound is between the hunter and the hare" describes the nobility under the post-High-Middle-Ages ancien regime.  I'm not saying it was some peasant's paradise, but it was much better than everything before it, and everything elsewhere at the time.

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I think you are experiencing, either knowingly or unknowingly, the problem that a dialectical system of history is that it experiences holes of information that could leave out important events which have a profound effect on other events. The article makes no mention of the Greeks, though I find it interesting you start with Mesopotamia.

'Men do not change, they unmask themselves' - Germaine de Stael

 

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Laughing Man:
makes no mention of the Greeks

My article focuses on transitions between eras of ascendent and languishing political freedom.  I believe the advent of classical Hellenic culture does not qualify as such a transition.  If political freedom is truly ascendent, it will make its mark in a dramatic increase in general human welfare, as it did in the high middle ages, and in the industrial revolution.  The Greeks accomplished much in the purely intellectual realm.  But Democritus's atomic theory didn't free any helots.  And Aristotle's metaphysics didn't do squat for infant mortality.  And I'm no fan of democracy, so no points there.

Laughing Man:
I find it interesting you start with Mesopotamia.

How so?

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Lilburne:
If political freedom is truly ascendent, it will make its mark in a dramatic increase in human welfare, as it did in the high middle ages, and in the industrial revolution.  The Greeks accomplished much in the purely intellectual realm.  But Democritus's atomic theory didn't free any helots.  And Aristotle's metaphysics didn't do squat for infant mortality.  And I'm no fan of democracy, so no points there.

Well I would take a position much like Mises and Rothbard in the sense that ideas are the beginning stages of either increase or decreases in human welfare. Thus the ideas of the Greeks helped establish a basic framework of the arguments towards / against certain political ideas such as liberty, freedom, property. The ideas of Aristotle, Plato, Xeno and the Stotics, these have force behind how politics develops. You seem to be taking more of a materialistic point of view concerning institutions as a factor in human welfare.

Lilburne:
How so?

Well Mespotamia is an eastern civilization. It is generally concluded that western civilization really didn't start until the Greeks themselves. I do not mean to say that ideas and norms were not traded between west and east, so that is why I find it interesting that you start off with an eastern civilization in explaining freedom which largely deals with western culture.

'Men do not change, they unmask themselves' - Germaine de Stael

 

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Laughing Man:
Well I would take a position much like Mises and Rothbard in the sense that ideas are the beginning stages of either increase or decreases in human welfare.

To a certain degree, yes.  But I think it's not to as high of a degree as Rothbard made it out to be.  There were no pro-weak-state philosophers that paved the way for the High Middle Ages.  It was the result of a historical accident: a bizarre equilibrium of Throne and Altar as opposing forces.

 And the limited monarchy that came out of 17th century England, which was responsible for the Industrial Revolution there, did not spring out of the head of John Locke, or any other political philosopher.  Again it was a matter of equilibrium.  The nobility wasn't strong enough to keep the people under their thumb any longer.  But the people weren't strong enough (yet) to impose all the maladies of populist democracy.  So they, for a time, met in the liberal middle.

Laughing Man:
Thus the ideas of the Greeks helped establish a basic framework of the arguments towards / against certain political ideas such as liberty, freedom, property.

As I've said, I don't think propertarian liberalism is an idea that needs to be formulated by philosophers.  I think it's an inherent part of man's moral psyche.

Laughing Man:
Well Mespotamia is an eastern civilization. It is generally concluded that western civilization really didn't start until the Greeks themselves.

I discuss Mesopotamia because it is a cultural ancestor of the west.  To understand what the west is, we need to understand what it evolved from.

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Juan replied on Wed, Oct 7 2009 11:41 PM
I discuss Mesopotamia because it is a cultural ancestor of the west. To understand what the west is, we need to understand what it evolved from.
And greece is not ?

February 17 - 1600 - Giordano Bruno is burnt alive by the catholic church.
Aquinas : "much more reason is there for heretics, as soon as they are convicted of heresy, to be not only excommunicated but even put to death."

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Juan:
I discuss Mesopotamia because it is a cultural ancestor of the west. To understand what the west is, we need to understand what it evolved from.
And greece is not ?

Again, the article is about transitions.  Mesopotamia is an ancestor of the west AND the locale of a transition from an era of ascendant political freedom to an era of languishing political freedom.  Greece is an ancestor of the west, but not a locale of a significant transition toward or away from ascendant political freedom.

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Lilburne:
There were no pro-weak-state philosophers that paved the way for the High Middle Ages.

Saint Thomas Aquinas? Isn't the name of your blog "Summa Anthropica" a play of words on Aquinas' Summa Theologica? Or is that a coincidence?

Lilburne:
To a certain degree, yes.  But I think it's not to as high of a degree as Rothbard made it out to be.  There were no pro-weak-state philosophers that paved the way for the High Middle Ages.  It was the result of a historical accident: a bizarre equilibrium of Throne and Altar as opposing forces.

The throne and alter were not actual opposing forces. The alter was usually the legitimizers of the throne and vice versa.

Lilburne:
 And the limited monarchy that came out of 17th century England, which was responsible for the Industrial Revolution there, did not spring out of the head of John Locke, or any other political philosopher.

I think Mises covers this in the introduction of Human Action in which he states that the Industrial revolution was a result of the ideas of the economists. Again the power of ideas, so while it did not necessarily come from the head of one individual it came as a series of progressions from various sources in which the culmination was the revolution itself.

Lilburne:
 Again it was a matter of equilibrium.  The nobility wasn't strong enough to keep the people under their thumb any longer.  But the people weren't strong enough (yet) to impose all the maladies of populist democracy.  So they, for a time, met in the liberal middle.


Don't take this as a personal attack but what you are saying is closely akin to a Marxist interpretation of history.

- Matter of equilibrium [ Negation of the Negation ]

- Nobility oppressing the people [ Class oppression, though you could say this is a libertarian class anaylsis of rulers and ruled and not necessarily nobility vs worker, so I guess you would have to further define what you mean ]

- People were not strong enough to impose populist democracy [ Class consciousness concerning the next transcended epoch of political development and the realization of moving towards it as a class ]

- Plus with all this emphasis on the institutions and the mild treatment of ideas as benign. 

I think a really good book for you, I noticed at the beginning you said you were an amateur historian, would be Mises Theory and History. It looks at how history in interpreted and deals with historical materialism [ a Marxist philosophy of history which I think you are just partly skimming ]. I think it is without a doubt one of Mises' most underrated books. So if catch the 'historian's bug' like I have and so many other historians have [ especially at the LvMi. There are a few actual degree holding historians here but so many people engage in historical topics that it is really quite grand ] then a book explaining the philosophical implications of history would be a good stepping stone. 

Lilburne:
As I've said, I don't think propertarian liberalism is an idea that needs to be formulated by philosophers.  I think it's an inherent part of man's moral psyche.

Well I think that there is a concept of just property in the minds of men but perhaps not a fully realized system of how to best propound it. I think that is why we continue to have property rights discussions with minarchists, conservatives, socialists etc. I agree with the Rothbardian/Nockian view of social power and political power, we see in history the attempt to propound ideas as to how best function as a people.

'Men do not change, they unmask themselves' - Germaine de Stael

 

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Lilburne:
 Greece is an ancestor of the west, but not a locale of a significant transition toward or away from ascendant political freedom.

Do you deem the concept of natural rights as not a significant transition towards political freedom? A theory of what the government  cannot do in accordance with the individual man? I think that such a theory is paramount to the exposition of political liberty. The theory was a product of Aristotle and the Stotics.

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Laughing Man:

Lilburne:
There were no pro-weak-state philosophers that paved the way for the High Middle Ages.

Saint Thomas Aquinas?

The High Middle Ages were roughly the 11th through the 13th centuries.  St. Thomas Aquinas lived from 1225-1274.  He couldn't have paved the way for the High Middle Ages when he lived at the tail end of them.  He was called the "Angelic Doctor", but he wasn't so angelic that he could time travel.

Laughing Man:
Isn't the name of your blog "Summa Anthropica" a play of words on Aquinas' Summa Theologica? Or is that a coincidence?

It's no coincidence.

Laughing Man:
The throne and alter were not actual opposing forces. The alter was usually the legitimizers of the throne and vice versa.

You seem to have missed a key thesis in my article.  I contend that what makes Catholic Europe so different is that, for the first time in history, throne and altar WERE consistently opposing forces.

Laughing Man:
I think Mises covers this in the introduction of Human Action in which he states that the Industrial revolution was a result of the ideas of the economists.

I wouldn't say he "covers" it.  He asserts it, but doesn't marshall any evidence to support it (which is totally understandable, since historical analysis wasn't the aim of the book).

Laughing Man:
Don't take this as a personal attack but what you are saying is closely akin to a Marxist interpretation of history.

Why should anyone consider such a statement an attack?  It's not a priori certain that Marx was wrong about everything he wrote.

Laughing Man:
Matter of equilibrium [ Negation of the Negation

You have a tendency of seeing ideological kinship in the mere coincident use of common English words.

Laughing Man:
Nobility oppressing the people [ Class oppression, though you could say this is a libertarian class anaylsis of rulers and ruled and not necessarily nobility vs worker, so I guess you would have to further define what you mean ]

A nobility is, by the most commonly used definition in political philosophy, a privileged caste, not simply an economic class.  Not every landowner was a nobleman.  I didn't say "landowners oppressing the people", which would have been a class analysis.

Laughing Man:
[ Class consciousness concerning the next transcended epoch of political development and the realization of moving towards it as a class ]

Throughout the 19th century, there was indeed a sense, even within the British Conservative Party, that ever-increasing people power was the wave of the future.

Laughing Man:
Plus with all this emphasis on the institutions and the mild treatment of ideas as benign. 

Sure, I see a similarity there.  Doesn't bother me a bit.

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Laughing Man:

Lilburne:
There were no pro-weak-state philosophers that paved the way for the High Middle Ages.

Saint Thomas Aquinas?

The High Middle Ages were roughly the 11th through the 13th centuries.  St. Thomas Aquinas lived from 1225-1274.  He couldn't have paved the way for the High Middle Ages when he lived at the tail end of them.  He was called the "Angelic Doctor", but he wasn't so angelic that he could time travel.

Laughing Man:
Isn't the name of your blog "Summa Anthropica" a play of words on Aquinas' Summa Theologica? Or is that a coincidence?

It's no coincidence.

Laughing Man:
The throne and alter were not actual opposing forces. The alter was usually the legitimizers of the throne and vice versa.

You seem to have missed a key thesis in my article.  I contend that what makes Catholic Europe so different is that, for the first time in history, throne and altar WERE consistently opposing forces.

Laughing Man:
I think Mises covers this in the introduction of Human Action in which he states that the Industrial revolution was a result of the ideas of the economists.

I wouldn't say he "covers" it.  He asserts it, but doesn't marshall any evidence to support it (which is totally understandable, since historical analysis wasn't the aim of the book).

Laughing Man:
Don't take this as a personal attack but what you are saying is closely akin to a Marxist interpretation of history.

Why should anyone consider such a statement an attack?  It's not a priori certain that Marx was wrong about everything he wrote.

Laughing Man:
Matter of equilibrium [ Negation of the Negation

You have a tendency of seeing ideological kinship in the mere coincident use of common English words.

Laughing Man:
Nobility oppressing the people [ Class oppression, though you could say this is a libertarian class anaylsis of rulers and ruled and not necessarily nobility vs worker, so I guess you would have to further define what you mean ]

A nobility is, by the most commonly used definition in political philosophy, a privileged caste, not simply an economic class.  Not every landowner was a nobleman.  I didn't say "landowners oppressing the people", which would have been a class analysis.

Laughing Man:
[ Class consciousness concerning the next transcended epoch of political development and the realization of moving towards it as a class ]

Throughout the 19th century, there was indeed a sense, even within the British Conservative Party, that ever-increasing people power was the wave of the future.

Laughing Man:
Plus with all this emphasis on the institutions and the mild treatment of ideas as benign. 

Sure, I see a similarity there.  Doesn't bother me a bit.

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Laughing Man:
I think that such a theory is paramount to the exposition of political liberty.

I care more about the development of political liberty than the theoretical exposition of it.

Laughing Man:
A theory of what the government  cannot do in accordance with the individual man?

Again, the intrinsic sense of right and wrong is infinitely more important than sophisticated theories, which are often just rationalizations, either of what will benefit the theorizer, or of what they feel is right in their heart.

For example, I don't think it's a coincidence that Hobbes travelled in royalist social circles (he tutored the Prince of Wales) and Locke was in liberal social circles (his patron was the liberal Lord Shaftesbury).  Each man knew which side his bread was buttered on.  So, Hobbes concocted incoherent theories that validated the venality of his royalist buddies, and Locke concocted incoherent theories that provided (superfluous) validation to the fundamental decency and goodwill of his patron, Shaftesbury.

"the obligation to justice is founded entirely on the interests of society, which require mutual abstinence from property" -David Hume
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Juan replied on Thu, Oct 8 2009 2:18 AM
Lilburne,

I remember a post of yours in which you said something like "At that time I was an atheist and I made a silly comment on X" - or something along those lines. What struck me was the part "I was an atheist" which seemed to suggest that you are not an atheist anymore.

If it's not too personal might I ask what [revealed?] religion do you subscribe to now ?

February 17 - 1600 - Giordano Bruno is burnt alive by the catholic church.
Aquinas : "much more reason is there for heretics, as soon as they are convicted of heresy, to be not only excommunicated but even put to death."

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Juan:
Lilburne,

I remember a post of yours in which you said something like "At that time I was an atheist and I made a silly comment on X" - or something along those lines. What struck me was the part "I was an atheist" which seemed to suggest that you are not an atheist anymore.

If it's not too personal might I ask what [revealed?] religion do you subscribe to now ?

It's not too personal, and I will answer.  But first, I'm curious, why do you ask?

"the obligation to justice is founded entirely on the interests of society, which require mutual abstinence from property" -David Hume
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Juan replied on Thu, Oct 8 2009 3:05 AM
I imagine my mental processes are not too sophisticated...The thing is, your historical revisionism seems to be presenting the [Catholic] church as opposing political power and thus advancing freedom. So I wondered...

February 17 - 1600 - Giordano Bruno is burnt alive by the catholic church.
Aquinas : "much more reason is there for heretics, as soon as they are convicted of heresy, to be not only excommunicated but even put to death."

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Juan:
I imagine my mental processes are not too sophisticated...The thing is, your historical revisionism seems to be presenting the [Catholic] church as opposing political power and thus advancing freedom. So I wondered...

I'm not a Catholic, but I share the same view. You don't even have to believe that the Catholic Church was a counterweight to political power to buy into the hypothesis that it helped to advance freedom. Even if it was simply a distinct political power in addition to other political powers it could have the same effect. Greater competition in the political realm kept other states from achieving greater monopoly power and thus weakened them relative to a world with less competition from the Catholic Church.

If there is more competition in the political realm, then freedom is advanced to a higher degree (relative to less competition).

The existence of the Catholic Church caused greater competition in the political realm.

Thus, the Catholic Church caused freedom to advance to a higher degree (relative to no Catholic Church).

I'm tired as hell, I hope that made sense.

"I cannot prove, but am prepared to affirm, that if you take care of clarity in reasoning, most good causes will take care of themselves, while some bad ones are taken care of as a matter of course." -Anthony de Jasay

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Lilburne:
The High Middle Ages were roughly the 11th through the 13th centuries.  St. Thomas Aquinas lived from 1225-1274.  He couldn't have paved the way for the High Middle Ages when he lived at the tail end of them.  He was called the "Angelic Doctor", but he wasn't so angelic that he could time travel.

Oh you are talking about people before the high Middle Ages. OK I though your comment was concerning it. Well isn't the Dark Ages before the High Middle Ages? If so then what we saw during the Middle Ages was the rediscovery of ancient literature such as Aristotle and Plato. I think that would be a 'road paver' so to speak for what transpired during the high Middle Ages, the rediscovery of lost knowledge before their time.

Lilburne:
You seem to have missed a key thesis in my article.  I contend that what makes Catholic Europe so different is that, for the first time in history, throne and altar WERE consistently opposing forces.

But they essentially weren't. The throne was not the altar like in Eastern civilizations but the throne did work with the altar. Granted one party would of been happy to been the overlord of the other which makes it seem as they they were constantly fighting, but this is like the premise that government intervention is always anti-business. Quite the opposite, big business has always been in kahoots with the government in order to expand its power.

Lilburne:
I wouldn't say he "covers" it.  He asserts it, but doesn't marshall any evidence to support it (which is totally understandable, since historical analysis wasn't the aim of the book).

So you propound that the industrial revolution was an inevitability? That it could of happened without economic theoreticians?

Lilburne:
Why should anyone consider such a statement an attack?  It's not a priori certain that Marx was wrong about everything he wrote.

Well it has been thoroughly refuted by Mises & Rothbard and even the mainstream historical community.

Lilburne:
You have a tendency of seeing ideological kinship in the mere coincident use of common English words.

Well am I wrong? You have just said that not everything Marx wrote was wrong. I did say perhaps knowingly or unknowingly you are saying things that are very much akin to Marxist historical philosophy. You openly declare you are a amateur historian [ not that there is anything wrong with that ]. Perhaps I am over-analyzing but perhaps I am not. I mean history is my subject, especially Marxism and some other things. I'd be more willing to admit a lack of knowledge concerning economics or philosophy rather then historical interpretations and events.

Lilburne:
A nobility is, by the most commonly used definition in political philosophy, a privileged caste, not simply an economic class.  Not every landowner was a nobleman.  I didn't say "landowners oppressing the people", which would have been a class analysis.

Well historical materialism has used multiple labels concerning what progresses the events of human development. To put it simply, there is the ruled and the rulers who are always in conflict. This is very close to libertarian class analysis which came before Marx and that is why I made that comment about how you should expand more in order to have your readers not confuse the two.

Lilburne:
Throughout the 19th century, there was indeed a sense, even within the British Conservative Party, that ever-increasing people power was the wave of the future.

Do you mean to say the Tories?

 

 

'Men do not change, they unmask themselves' - Germaine de Stael

 

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Lilburne:
I care more about the development of political liberty than the theoretical exposition of it.

Well you cannot separate practice and theory because it then seems like practices merely happen without cause out of the blue. Like mana being dropped from heaven.

Lilburne:
Again, the intrinsic sense of right and wrong is infinitely more important than sophisticated theories, which are often just rationalizations, either of what will benefit the theorizer, or of what they feel is right in their heart.

Well it sounds like you are taking an emotivist viewpoint of history. Going by what feels right and wrong.

Like: Black plague...yuck.

Instead of: The Black plague happened on X, Y is why the Black plague happened, Z is the result of the Black plague.

Lilburne:
For example, I don't think it's a coincidence that Hobbes travelled in royalist social circles (he tutored the Prince of Wales) and Locke was in liberal social circles (his patron was the liberal Lord Shaftesbury).  Each man knew which side his bread was buttered on.  So, Hobbes concocted incoherent theories that validated the venality of his royalist buddies, and Locke concocted incoherent theories that provided (superfluous) validation to the fundamental decency and goodwill of his patron, Shaftesbury.

Well what circles they traveled in is irrelevant. There ideas, their theories whether they are right or wrong, that is what is relevant.

'Men do not change, they unmask themselves' - Germaine de Stael

 

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Juan:
I imagine my mental processes are not too sophisticated...The thing is, your historical revisionism seems to be presenting the [Catholic] church as opposing political power and thus advancing freedom. So I wondered...

You must have missed this...

One should not read religious bias in this historical interpretation. Suffice it to say that this author is not himself Catholic.
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Laughing Man:
Oh you are talking about people before the high Middle Ages. OK I though your comment was concerning it. Well isn't the Dark Ages before the High Middle Ages? If so then what we saw during the Middle Ages was the rediscovery of ancient literature such as Aristotle and Plato.

Aristotle's work was rediscovered throughout the High Middle Ages, not before (except the Organon, which was never really lost, because Boethius translated them into Latin before the complete collapse of the Roman west).  And Plato's work (except the Timaeus, which also was never lost) wasn't rediscovered until the Renaissance.

Laughing Man:
But they essentially weren't. The throne was not the altar like in Eastern civilizations but the throne did work with the altar. Granted one party would of been happy to been the overlord of the other which makes it seem as they they were constantly fighting, but this is like the premise that government intervention is always anti-business. Quite the opposite, big business has always been in kahoots with the government in order to expand its power.

I said "consistently", not "constantly."  Yes, the Church sometimes aided certain princes.  But on the whole, it was a check on state power.  By the way, both Rothbard and Ralph Raico saw the Church as an hugely important check on state power in the High Middle Ages.

From Rothbard's lecture "Ideology and Theories of History"...

"...the Catholic Church was a transnational check on state rule.  I think it's the only case in history in which Church and State were not the same.  In other words, in most civilizations, church and state were fused together, in a mighty alliance of throne and altar, as the conservatives like to put it.  In other words you have the king, and the king is taxing people, etc, and then you have the church, and the church is telling people to obey the king, and of course getting part of the loop: getting a good chunk of the loot.  You have state and church oppressing the public: taxing and controlling, etc, etc.  I think this is the only period in history in which Church and State were separate: in other words, the Catholic Church, which was transnational, and therefore kept a severe limit on the power of each king.  As a matter of fact, particularly, and by the way I recommend a marvelous book by Jean Beckler, a French economic historian, called "The Origins of Capitalism".  Why did capitalism only arise in western Europe?  Obviously there's been trade in every civilization, but real capitalism (...) really comes in only in western Europe.  And what is it that made it so?  And he essentially pinpoints the fact that power is decentralized, instead of being in a central empire, a central despotism.  Each power is limited, you have independent principalities, you have villages which have autonomous power in many senses, and feudal landlords have autonomous power, and you have the transnational church to check individual states.  You have very little state power either externally or internally as a result of these checks which allowed the market to flourish.(...)  It's no coincidence, according to Beckler, that the real expansion of capitalism comes in the 11th century, the so-called Renaissance of the 11th century, which coincides with (Pope) Gregory VII's magnificent smashing of the power of the state in investiture, the power of the king."

Laughing Man:
So you propound that the industrial revolution was an inevitability? That it could of happened without economic theoreticians?

It did happen largely without the influence of economic theoreticians.  I don't believe the English were limiting the crown in order to be in accordance with Scholastic economic theory.  And the significant acceptance of the laissez-faire prescriptions of political economists didn't occur until after the Industrial Revolution was already underway in England.

Laughing Man:

Lilburne:
Throughout the 19th century, there was indeed a sense, even within the British Conservative Party, that ever-increasing people power was the wave of the future.

Do you mean to say the Tories?

The Tories changed their official name to the "Conservative Party" after the Reform Bill of 1832.

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Lilburne:
Aristotle's work was rediscovered throughout the High Middle Ages, not before (except the Organon, which was never really lost, because Boethius translated them into Latin before the complete collapse of the Roman west).  And Plato's work (except the Timaeus, which also was never lost) wasn't rediscovered until the Renaissance.

Weren't you asking what brought about the road to the high middle ages literature?

Lilburne:
I said "consistently", not "constantly."  Yes, the Church sometimes aided certain princes.  But on the whole, it was a check on state power.  By the way, both Rothbard and Ralph Raico saw the Church as an hugely important check on state power in the High Middle Ages.

In the sense that it did not allow for the complete rule of the state, but the church itself would of been happy to allow its complete rule. Like I said, each would be happy to be the overlord of the other which makes it seem like they were in constant conflict, however, a premise of 'kings are rulers of the earth and church heads are leaders of the heavens' developed.  Think of it like two monopolies who agreed not to get involved in the others business.

Lilburne:
It did happen largely without the influence of economic theoreticians.

Do you have any proof of this assertion?

'Men do not change, they unmask themselves' - Germaine de Stael

 

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