Book contents
- Time, History, and Political Thought
- Time, History, and Political Thought
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Note on References and the Bibliography
- Introduction: Time, History, and Political Thought
- 1 Out of Time? Eternity, Christology, and Justinianic Law
- 2 Historicity and Universality in Roman Law before 1600
- 3 ‘The Logic of Authority, and the Logic of Evidence’
- 4 Christian Time and the Commonwealth in Early Modern Political Thought
- 5 Politic History
- 6 Hobbes on the Theology and Politics of Time
- 7 The Recourse to Sacred History before the Enlightenment: Spinoza’s Theological–Political Treatise
- 8 Law, Chronology, and Scottish Conjectural History
- 9 Civilization and Perfectibility: Conflicting Views of the History of Humankind?
- 10 Kant on History, or Theodicy for Mortal Gods
- 11 Law’s Histories in Post-Napoleonic Germany
- 12 After Historicism: The Politics of Time and History in Twentieth-Century Germany
- 13 The Right to Rebel: History and Universality in the Political Thought of the Algerian Revolution
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Politic History
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 June 2023
- Time, History, and Political Thought
- Time, History, and Political Thought
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Note on References and the Bibliography
- Introduction: Time, History, and Political Thought
- 1 Out of Time? Eternity, Christology, and Justinianic Law
- 2 Historicity and Universality in Roman Law before 1600
- 3 ‘The Logic of Authority, and the Logic of Evidence’
- 4 Christian Time and the Commonwealth in Early Modern Political Thought
- 5 Politic History
- 6 Hobbes on the Theology and Politics of Time
- 7 The Recourse to Sacred History before the Enlightenment: Spinoza’s Theological–Political Treatise
- 8 Law, Chronology, and Scottish Conjectural History
- 9 Civilization and Perfectibility: Conflicting Views of the History of Humankind?
- 10 Kant on History, or Theodicy for Mortal Gods
- 11 Law’s Histories in Post-Napoleonic Germany
- 12 After Historicism: The Politics of Time and History in Twentieth-Century Germany
- 13 The Right to Rebel: History and Universality in the Political Thought of the Algerian Revolution
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In this chapter Kinch Hoekstra analyses the particular understanding of time and history characteristic of ‘politic history’, identified by scholars as a distinctive genre in late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century England, where it flourished as a historiographical version of ‘reason of state’. At its heart, Hoekstra argues, was an epistemic question: whether it is possible to derive political lessons from empirical, historical truths. Influenced by Italian discussions of how political knowledge could be drawn from historical experience, politic historians looked in particular to Machiavelli and Guicciardini. It was Philip Sidney, in his Defence of Poetry, who posed the epistemic question most sharply, and Francis Bacon who offered the fullest response. In turn, Hoekstra suggests, a Guicciardinian and Baconian conception of the value of history informs Hobbes’ preface to his translation of Thucydides, whom he famously characterised as ‘the most politique historiographer that ever writ’. Hoekstra ends by rejecting the scholarly consensus that Hobbes’ turn to ‘civil science’ marked his repudiation of a historical politics.
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- Time, History, and Political Thought , pp. 102 - 135Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023
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