登陆注册
34879100000139

第139章

In regard to practical politics, the writers in question never even thought of a revolution, but desired and demanded reforms alone, and that these should be subjective mainly; they called on the Government to sweep away abuses, and appoint honourable men as ministers. The positive recommendations made by them as to the course to be pursued were, for example, that the royal children should receive a good upbringing, that princes should be of frugal habits, &c. The French Revolution was forced on by the stiff-necked obstinacy of prejudices, by haughtiness, utter want of thought, and avarice. The philosophers of whom we are speaking were able to give only a general idea of what ought to be done; they could not indicate the mode in which the reforms were to be carried out. It was the Government's business to make arrangements and carry out reforms in concrete shape; but it did not perceive this. What the philosophers brought forward and maintained as a remedy for this horrible state of disorder was, speaking generally, that men should no longer be in the position of laymen, either with regard to religion or to law; so that in religious matters there should not be a hierarchy, a limited and selected number of priests, and in the same way that there should not be in legal matters an exclusive caste and society (not even a class of professional lawyers), in whom should reside, and to whom should be restricted, the knowledge of what is eternal, divine, true, and right, and by whom other men should be commanded and directed; but that human reason should have the right of giving its assent and its opinion. To treat barbarians as laymen is quite as it should be - barbarians are nothing but laymen; but to treat thinking men as laymen is very hard. This great claim made by man to subjective *******, perception and conviction, the philosophers in question contended for heroically and with splendid genius, with warmth and fire, with spirit and courage, maintaining that a man's own self, the human spirit, is the source from which is derived all that is to be respected by him. There thus manifests itself in them the fanaticism of abstract thought. We Germans were passive at first with regard to the existing state of affairs, we endured it; in the second place, when that state of affairs was overthrown, we were just as passive: it was overthrown by the efforts of others, we let it be taken away from us, we suffered it all to happen.

In Germany, Frederick II. allied himself with this culture, a rare example in those days. French court manners, operas, gardens, dresses, were widely adopted in Germany, but not French philosophy; yet in the form of wit and jest much of it found its way into this upper world, and much that was evil and barbarous was driven away. Frederick II., without having been brought up on melancholy psalms, without having had to learn one or two of them every day by heart, without the barbarous metaphysics and logic of Wolff (for what did he find to admire in Germany except Gellert?), was well acquainted with the great, although formal and abstract principles of religion and the state, and governed in accordance therewith, as far as circumstances allowed. Nothing else was at that time required in his nation; one cannot ask that he should have reformed and revolutionised it, since not a single person yet demanded representative government and the publicity of courts of justice. He introduced what there was need of, religious tolerance, legislation, improvements in the administration of justice, economy in the revenues of state; of the wretched German law there remained no longer in his states even the merest phantom. He showed what was the object and purpose of the state, and at the same time cast down all privileges, the private rights which pertained to Germans, and arbitrary statute laws. It is foolish when cant and German pseudo-patriotism pounce down upon him now, and try to disparage the greatness of a man whose influence was so enormous, and would even detract from his fame by a charge of vanity and wickedness. What German patriotism aims at should be reasonable.

同类推荐
  • 本心斋疏食谱

    本心斋疏食谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 瀛涯胜览

    瀛涯胜览

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 葬书

    葬书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • THE ADVENTURES OF GERARD

    THE ADVENTURES OF GERARD

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 杂说

    杂说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 真实指令

    真实指令

    我会的,你不一定会;我有的,你也不一定有
  • 万道帝君

    万道帝君

    杨恒,一个小家族的二少爷,父亲是族长的弟弟,一次偶然机会,被现代拳术大宗师杨恒融魂,随即性格不骄不躁,气度非凡,但却不失年轻人的锐气,对自己人平和,对敌人杀伐决断。
  • 不重要的一天又开始了

    不重要的一天又开始了

    ——柳叶儿丝,春雨细,少年将行莫问前程呐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 情归云起时

    情归云起时

    人生那么长,你最想与见谁?如果,时间可以重来,你是否还愿意遇见那个曾经的那个他!林婉婉因两分成绩与省重点高中失之交臂,最后来她选择来镇上普通高中锦江中学就读,原本以为会认真好好读书的她却遇见了他,青春时的心动在林婉婉的眼里却成了永远!她变的更勇敢、更自信,可是她却始终没有明白现实有时梦想更残酷.....
  • 鸾媓来仪

    鸾媓来仪

    一朝,墨青青穿越到古代成了皇帝!一次,墨青青选太傅选了一个爱和他对着干的慕容默!去沧州一趟,还被这个腹黑太傅知道了自己是女儿身!墨青青:这日子还怎么过?这皇帝还怎么当?
  • 晦隐之芒

    晦隐之芒

    这是一个纯洁的邪恶故事~~~这里有御姐~萝莉~警花~邻家小妹~这是一个不平凡的人的平凡生活~(其实某猫还是很懒的,求各位大大多多支持)
  • 都市极品保镖

    都市极品保镖

    萝莉有三好。御姐有三妙。刘逸,他是豪门抛弃的孤儿,在经历女友出轨,黑帮殴打,近乎死亡的时候,激活神秘戒指,习得一个个绝世功法、获得一个个逆天道具,纵横都市。我的美女总裁白天是女王,晚上是女仆,御姐身萝莉心,来啊。
  • 碎尘劫

    碎尘劫

    放浪一笑沧海间,独恋红尘不慕仙。新人新作,多多包涵。
  • 断指四代

    断指四代

    一场真实而漫长的梦,融化了那段冰封于记忆深渊之下的往事。爱,本没有错,但宿命说错了,那就是错了。施加在四代人身上的断指流血的诅咒,看似强悍,到最后却战胜不了四代人之间血浓于水的羁绊。不管是尘缘,还是孽缘,只要缘还在,就可以因岁月的不静滞而长存,就可以因轮回的不停歇而永生。人、天、命,为什么非要拼得你死我活呢?