Enlightened histories: civilization, war and the Scottish enlightenment

The European Legacy 10 (2):177-192 (2005)
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Abstract

The concept of civil society continues to generate considerable interest, while the concept of civilization attracts comparatively little attention. This has led to a tendency to oversimplify the relationship between civil societies and militarily powerful sovereign states. Civil societies, it is often argued, are those societies that have emerged from a successful process of domestic pacification and effective control of state power. In this paper, it will be argued that some prominent Scottish Enlightenment thinkers developed theories of civilization grounded in more complex historical narratives, in which the accomplishments of civil society were tied to the achievement of state sovereignty based on the successful monopoly of military might. The purpose of this paper is to trace the role of state sovereignty and military monopolization, and the consequent prominence given to the practice of war, in the “historical” theories of civilization articulated by David Hume, William Robertson, Adam Smith and Adam Ferguson.

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Bruce Buchan
Griffith University

References found in this work

Adam Ferguson Returns.Andreas Kalyvas & Ira Katznelson - 1998 - Political Theory 26 (2):173-197.
Civility and Empire.John Darwin - 2000 - In Peter Burke & Brian Harrison (eds.), Civil Histories: Essays Presented to Sir Keith Thomas. Oxford University Press. pp. 321--36.
Adam Ferguson and the paradox of progress and decline.Lisa Hill - 1997 - History of Political Thought 18 (4):677-706.
Hume, modern patriotism, and commercial society.A. B. Stilz - 2003 - History of European Ideas 29 (1):15-32.

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