"Does thought preside over the successive transformations of human communities? Hegel asserted it did, and changes in the form of a state are for him only the shadows cast by the majestic march of ideas engendered by the world spirit which advances through an unceasing synthesis of opposites bred by itself. With Marx ideas are no longer queens but servants, the mere formal expressions of needs and feelings brought into being by situations: their effectiveness is not their own but has been lent them by the social impulsions which give them birth. Marx was wrong to deny the creative quality of the spirit, but Hegel misunderstood the way in which the mechanism of politics works. It is true that ideas are queens by birth: but they only gain favour when they enter the service of interests and instincts. Follow an idea through from its birth to its triumph, and it becomes clear that it came to power only at the price of an astounding degradation of itself. A reasoned structure of arguments ...does not as such make its way into the social consciousness: rather it has undergone pressures which have destroyed its internal architecture, and left in its place only a confused babel of concepts, the most magical of which wins credit for the others. In the result, it is not reason which has found a guide but passion which has found a flag. The history of the democratic doctrine furnishes a striking example... Born for the purpose of standing as a bulwark against Power, it ends by providing Power with the finest soil it has ever had in which to spread itself over the social field."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Philosophers from FranceUniversity of Oxford facultyEconomists from FranceUniversity of Chicago facultyUniversity of California, Berkeley faculty
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
pp. 237-238
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Bertrand_de_Jouvenel
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Bertrand de Jouvenel
Bertrand de Jouvenel des Ursins (31 October 1903 – 1 March 1987), a late French aristocrat, was a philosopher, political economist, and futurist. Among other places, he taught at Oxford, the Cambridge, Yale
31 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Bertrand de Jouvenel →
Related Quotes
"Power changes its appearance but not its reality. Politics are about power; we cannot evade that truth or its consequ…"
"Barbarian invasions would be superfluous: We are our own Huns."
"In later times, Power's growth has continued at an accelerated pace, and its extension has brought a corresponding ex…"
"Democracy, then, in the centralizing, pattern-making, absolutist shape which we have given to it is, it is clear, the…"
"As we shall see, theories like those of Divine Right and Popular Sovereignty, which pass for opposites, stem in reali…"
"Ransack the history of revolutions, and it will be found that every fall of a regime has been presaged by a defiance …"
"Command is a mountain top. The air breathed there is different, and the perspectives seen there are different, from t…"
"If there is in Power's make-up an egoistical urge combined with the will to serve society, it is a natural suppositio…"
"As every advance of Power is useful for war, so war is useful for the advance of power; war is like a sheep-dog harry…"
"The Führer will be impressed only if the British and the French nations cure themselves of their present laxity and s…"