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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
To Strauss or Not to Strauss, Part 2, December 3, 2006
Paul Rahe's Republics Ancient and Modern was originally published in hardback in one volume. For the paperback version published in 1994, he has chosen to split his work into three volumes. Each volume deals with one of the three major time periods on which his work focuses. The second volume deal with the early modern period.
His use of that phrase covers the Renaissance, the Reformation and the early Enlightenment periods. He focuses on Machiavelli, Montaigne, Descartes, Bacon, Hobbes and Locke but manages to weave Condorcet, Halifax, Mandeville, Hooker, Harrington, Hamilton, Franklin, Madison, Shaftesbury, Tocqueville, Montesqieu, and Mercy Otis Warren along with many others. He introduced me to Paolo Sarpi, a Venetian theologian and freethinker, who seems to have been an extraordinary character. Rahe also brings his mastery of the ancients to the discussion particularly Plato, Aristotle, Polybius and Tacitus in this volume.
The third volume continues the discussion through the American founding period. He is especially good on Hamilton in that volume but he manages to also incorporate just about everybody he dealt with in the first two volumes.
Really, one of the best ways I can give you an idea of Rahe's breadth and depth is to state that his three volumes could be used as the central texts in a history of Western Political Thought class. As I said in my review of the first volume, Rahe's scholarship is breathtaking.
What I would like to focus on in this review is some aspects of Rahe's methodology.
In the first volume, he was particularly concerned to counter what he feels has been the baleful influence of Weber and Marx on contemporary social science and history.
Rahe feels that both thinkers were economic reductionists who basically had it backwards. Throughout the whole of volume 1, Rahe is utilizing what he calls "regime analysis" which he feels was first exemplified by ancient writers like Polybius. In particular, he wants to assert that it was the way that the Greek city states answered certain questions about the social nature of human thought that led them to design the city states in the way they did.
In volumes 2 and 3, Rahe uses a Straussian methodology derived from Strauss' Persecution and the Art of Writing. Rahe is using this to highlight two central weakness of historicist thought. The first weakness is that historicism misses the impact that great individuals have on their culture. They are able to have that impact because of their ability to rise above the limitations of the thought of their period. This quality of critically transcending the culture speaks to the second flaw of historicism. Rahe makes like Zarathrustra when confronted by ideas like mentalites, paradigms or languages of discourse.
Rahe proposes something quite different. He believes that intellectual history reveals an ongoing conversation among great thinkers that operates on two levels. The Hobbes and Lockes of the world write in such a manner that it has both an esoteric and an exoteric meaning. The exoteric level speaks soothingly to the multitudes. It reassures them of the truth of their beliefs while planting little seeds of doubt for those who can discern them. The esoteric level speaks to the other great spirits who read the work in question. These subtle and careful readers see the critique of the cultural mainstream that is being presented and they can see the revolutionary conclusions that the author is trying to suggest.
Why would someone write like that? Easy. Persecution both political and religious. I think Rahe has a real point here. Anyone who has read Radical Empiricism by Jonathan Isreal can appreciate just how dangerous it was (even in a relatively enlightened country like The Netherlands) to publish religious innovations. These men lived in a time when it was possible to die for suggesting something that could be read as atheism or that government derived its authority from the consent of the people (Bush II is still having trouble with that idea).
The other great strength is that this approach allows the modern reader to understand why sometimes Locke or Hobbes or Montaigne seem to be contradicting something they said earlier. Using this sort of methodology, Rahe is able to give strong and innovative readings of Bacon, Montaigne, Descartes, Hobbes and Locke.
The irony of this approach is that it is improving our understanding of these authors by placing their thought even more squarely in the details of their historical context. They may not have been limited by their times but they cannot be correctly understood out of their own times.
The main concern I have with this is that it makes the whole panoply of issues around determining a correct interpretation of any one author that much more complicated. Rahe himself notes this and says that it "enormously" complicates "the scholar's task. The scholar's reading "would always be subject to challenge and open to doubt" (p.6).
And yet somehow, I do not read Rahe as seeing his interpretations to be subject to much challenge. This is an odd thing to me about Straussians in general. They can be subtle, powerful, sympathetic and generous readers who just seem to know that they are right. All that talking about natural right has gone to their heads.
Sometimes that self-assurance generates a certain attitude. Rahe's writing is sometimes marred by a snide weltschmerz brought on by the inadequacies of the contemporary academy. I grew weary of the undertone. Weltschmerz squared. Yikes.
In spite of this (probably private) critique, I really cannot complain about Rahe's methodology too much. I am for as many approaches to history as seem to be useful. My experience that it is not the methodology that makes the insight, it is the merger of the gifts of an individual historian and their methodology that makes for great history writing. Earlier I mentioned Isreal's Radical Empiricism. In spite of the myriad differences of approach, Rahe's volumes and Isreal's book are great companions that serve to support and correct each other.
Rahe is a great read. Give him a try. You many even enjoy his twilight sufferings. At the very least, you will be exposed to a dazzling array of thinkers.
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1 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Delightful presentation of a truly fantastic era, September 2, 2001
By A Customer
Paul Rahe depicts in nearly perfect form the ways and wonders of the ancient world. A wonderful informative on the political and economic intricacies of ancient Athens and Sparta, as well as surrounding Greek city-states, with brief allusions to our modern society. The only reason why I do not give this book a 5 is because, alas, no one is perfect. A must have in any classics library.
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