Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER I NECESSITY AND OPPORTUNENESS OF THIS NEW SCIENCE
- CHAPTER II PRINCIPAL PHILOSOPHICAL ATTEMPTS TO CONSTITUTE A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- CHAPTER III CHARACTERISTICS OF THE POSITIVE METHOD IN ITS APPLICATION TO SOCIAL PHENOMENA
- CHAPTER IV RELATION OF SOCIOLOGY TO THE OTHER DEPARTMENTS OF POSITIVE PHILOSOPHY
- CHAPTER V SOCIAL STATICS, OR THEORY OF THE SPONTANEOUS ORDER OF HUMAN SOCIETY
- CHAPTER VI SOCIAL DYNAMICS; OR THEORY OF THE NATURAL PROGRESS OF HUMAN SOCIETY
- CHAPTER VII PREPARATION OF THE HISTORICAL QUESTION.—FIRST THEOLOGICAL PHASE: FETICHISM.—BEGINNING OF THE THEOLOGICAL AND MILITARY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER VIII SECOND PHASE: POLYTHEISM.—DEVELOPMENT OF THE THEOLOGICAL AND MILITARY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER IX AGE OF MONOTHEISM.—MODIFICATION OF THE THEOLOGICAL AND MILITARY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER X METAPHYSICAL STATE, AND CRITICAL PERIOD OF MODERN SOCIETY
- CHAPTER XI RISE OF THE ELEMENTS OF THE POSITIVE STATE.—PREPARATION FOR SOCIAL REORGANIZATION
- CHAPTER XII REVIEW OF THE REVOLUTIONARY CRISIS.—ASCERTAINMENT OF THE FINAL TENDENCY OF MODERN SOCIETY
- CHAPTER XIII FINAL ESTIMATE OF THE POSITIVE METHOD
- CHAPTER XIV ESTIMATE OF THE RESULTS OF POSITIVE DOCTRINE IN ITS PREPARATORY STAGE
- CHAPTER XV ESTIMATE OF THE FINAL ACTION OF THE POSITIVE PHILOSOPHY
CHAPTER XII - REVIEW OF THE REVOLUTIONARY CRISIS.—ASCERTAINMENT OF THE FINAL TENDENCY OF MODERN SOCIETY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER I NECESSITY AND OPPORTUNENESS OF THIS NEW SCIENCE
- CHAPTER II PRINCIPAL PHILOSOPHICAL ATTEMPTS TO CONSTITUTE A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- CHAPTER III CHARACTERISTICS OF THE POSITIVE METHOD IN ITS APPLICATION TO SOCIAL PHENOMENA
- CHAPTER IV RELATION OF SOCIOLOGY TO THE OTHER DEPARTMENTS OF POSITIVE PHILOSOPHY
- CHAPTER V SOCIAL STATICS, OR THEORY OF THE SPONTANEOUS ORDER OF HUMAN SOCIETY
- CHAPTER VI SOCIAL DYNAMICS; OR THEORY OF THE NATURAL PROGRESS OF HUMAN SOCIETY
- CHAPTER VII PREPARATION OF THE HISTORICAL QUESTION.—FIRST THEOLOGICAL PHASE: FETICHISM.—BEGINNING OF THE THEOLOGICAL AND MILITARY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER VIII SECOND PHASE: POLYTHEISM.—DEVELOPMENT OF THE THEOLOGICAL AND MILITARY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER IX AGE OF MONOTHEISM.—MODIFICATION OF THE THEOLOGICAL AND MILITARY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER X METAPHYSICAL STATE, AND CRITICAL PERIOD OF MODERN SOCIETY
- CHAPTER XI RISE OF THE ELEMENTS OF THE POSITIVE STATE.—PREPARATION FOR SOCIAL REORGANIZATION
- CHAPTER XII REVIEW OF THE REVOLUTIONARY CRISIS.—ASCERTAINMENT OF THE FINAL TENDENCY OF MODERN SOCIETY
- CHAPTER XIII FINAL ESTIMATE OF THE POSITIVE METHOD
- CHAPTER XIV ESTIMATE OF THE RESULTS OF POSITIVE DOCTRINE IN ITS PREPARATORY STAGE
- CHAPTER XV ESTIMATE OF THE FINAL ACTION OF THE POSITIVE PHILOSOPHY
Summary
The two progressions which were preparing society for its regeneration had advanced at unequal rates,—the negative having far outstripped the positive; and thus the need of reorganization was vehemently felt before the method and the means of effecting it were disclosed. This is the true explanation of the vicious course taken by the revolutionary movement to this day. The explosion which ensued, lamentable as it was in many ways, was inevitable; and, besides being inevitable, it was salutary,—inasmuch as without it the caducity of the old system could not have been fully revealed, nor all hopes from it have been intrepidly cast away. The crisis proclaimed to all advanced peoples the approach of the regeneration which had been preparing for five centuries; and it afforded the solemn experiment which was necessary to show the powerlessness of critical principles to do anything but destroy. The preparation of the different European nations for the lesson varied, according as the monarchical and Catholic, or the aristocratic and Protestant form of power was established. We have seen that the former was the more favourable to the decay of the old system and the construction of the new; and for various reasons, France was evidently the country to take the lead.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte , pp. 434 - 496Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1853