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Tocqueville's Philpsophy of Freedom: A Trend Towards Concrete Sociology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

HEGEL'S philosophy of freedom and Comte's philosophy of progress have one trait in common, in spite of the basic differences in their starting points. Although Hegel's panlogistic dialectics and Comte's sociological scientism present various levels and antagonistic tendencies of philosophical thought, they share the same indifference concerning the philosophical and structural problems of human existence. While Kant was aware that the basic questions of philosophy referred to the fundamental elements of human life, these new synthetical systems of the historicity of the race did not care about the character and the nature of the human being. They helped to bring to the fore that tendency in thought which was described as the autonomous movement of a universal principle of determination, spiritual or naturalistic, in the process and as the meaning of history. In these philosophical and sociological systems man is only the tool and the actor (the Roman persona in the literal sense) in the self-realization of a universal principle, inherent in the process of society. Thus, human action and attitudes are predetermined by the principles that represent die pseudo-religious meaning of the historical development. So far as this is true, human personality, as centered around the actuality of freedom, spontaneity, responsibility, no longer exists. The hybris of Hegel and Comte to make die dynamic institutions “concrete universals” and to suppress the concreteness of individuals is one symptom of the human situation in the modern world. Slowly developing since the sixteenth century, this situation is completely realized in these philosophical systems that proclaim the immanence of life, the reality of a universal principle of determination and the weakness and frailty of the human personality. This trend of thinking got supremacy in philosophical and scientific modes of investigation, in particular in the powerful stratification of positivist and of empiricist methods in the social sciences. The discovery of Historicism and of Sociologism is the logical result of this basic position. It expresses correctly the stage of consciousness in which man realizes the demonry of the world of institutions which, although his very own achievement, is becoming emancipated from man and developing autonomously like the forces of nature.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1939

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References

1 Pierson, : Tocqueville and Beaumont in America, Oxford Univ. Press, 38Google Scholar.

2 Social Research, Nov. 1935.

3 Works, Vol. V., p. 459.

4 Murray, Gilbert: Liberality and Civilization, MacMillan, 1938Google Scholar.

5 Works, Vol. IV, p. 12; Vol. VI, p. 257; Vol. V. p. 449; Vol. VII, p. 476.

6 Works, Vol. VII, p. 476.

7 Works, Vol. VII, p. 262.

8 Souvenirs, p. 88f.

9 Works, Vol. VI, p. 301.

10 Works, Vol. V, p. 425 f.

11 Democracy in America, Vol. 2, p. 14–21.

12 Works, Vol. VI, p. 94f; 97f; VI, p. 172.

13 Works, Vol. VI, p. 400f.

14 Correspondence between Tocqueville and Gobineau, p. 312–13.

15 Salomon, Albert, “Sociology and Sociologism,” Journal of Social Philosophy, 1938Google Scholar.

16 Democracy in America, Vol. II, p. 406.

17 Ibid., p. 397.

18 Ibid., p. 443.

19 Ibid., p. 397.

20 Works. Vol. VII, p. 491.

21 Works, Vol. IX, p. 536, 541, 546, 557.

22 Souvenirs, p. 108–112.

23 Works, Vol. VI, p. 339; Vol. VII. passim.

24 Pierson: Tocqueville and Beaumont in America, passim.

25 Works, Vol. VII, p. 323: I know that there is another letter in which Tocqueville considers this interpretation to be wrong. However, it is perfectly in line with the general trend of his thought.

26 Democracy in America, Vol. II, p, 357.

27 Works, Vol. V, p. 175, 459; Vol. VI, p. 145, 150; Vol. VII, p. 182.

28 Works, Vol. V, p. 175.

29 J. Burckhardt, Das Zeitalter Konstantins, passitv

30 Works, Vol. V, p. 459.