David Hume: Prophet of the Counter-Revolution

Though usually Edmund Burke is identified as the first to articulate the principles of a modern conservative political tradition, arguably he was preceded by a Scotsman who is better known for espousing a brilliant concept of skepticism. As Laurence Bongie notes, “David Hume was undoubtedly the eighteenth-century British writer whose works were most widely known and acclaimed on the Continent during the later Enlightenment period. Hume’s impact [in France] was of undeniable importance, greater even for a time than the related influence of Burke, although it represents a contribution to French counter-revolutionary thought which, unlike that of Burke, has been almost totally ignored by historians to this day.” The bulk of Bongie’s work consists of the writings of French readers of Hume who were confronted, first, by the ideology of human perfection and, finally, by the actual terrors of the French Revolution. Offered in French in the original edition of David Hume published by Oxford University Press in 1965, these vitally important writings have been translated by the author into English for the Liberty Fund second edition. In his foreword, Donald Livingston observes that “If conservatism is taken to be an intellectual critique of the first attempt at modern total revolution, then the first such event was not the French but the Puritan revolution, and the first systematic critique of this sort of act was given by Hume.”

Laurence L. Bongie is Professor Emeritus of French at the University of British Columbia.

Donald Livingston is Professor of Philosophy at Emory University.

Please note: This title is available as an ebook for purchase on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and iTunes.

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David Hume: Prophet of the Counter-Revolution

Though usually Edmund Burke is identified as the first to articulate the principles of a modern conservative political tradition, arguably he was preceded by a Scotsman who is better known for espousing a brilliant concept of skepticism. As Laurence Bongie notes, “David Hume was undoubtedly the eighteenth-century British writer whose works were most widely known and acclaimed on the Continent during the later Enlightenment period. Hume’s impact [in France] was of undeniable importance, greater even for a time than the related influence of Burke, although it represents a contribution to French counter-revolutionary thought which, unlike that of Burke, has been almost totally ignored by historians to this day.” The bulk of Bongie’s work consists of the writings of French readers of Hume who were confronted, first, by the ideology of human perfection and, finally, by the actual terrors of the French Revolution. Offered in French in the original edition of David Hume published by Oxford University Press in 1965, these vitally important writings have been translated by the author into English for the Liberty Fund second edition. In his foreword, Donald Livingston observes that “If conservatism is taken to be an intellectual critique of the first attempt at modern total revolution, then the first such event was not the French but the Puritan revolution, and the first systematic critique of this sort of act was given by Hume.”

Laurence L. Bongie is Professor Emeritus of French at the University of British Columbia.

Donald Livingston is Professor of Philosophy at Emory University.

Please note: This title is available as an ebook for purchase on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and iTunes.

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David Hume: Prophet of the Counter-Revolution

David Hume: Prophet of the Counter-Revolution

David Hume: Prophet of the Counter-Revolution

David Hume: Prophet of the Counter-Revolution

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Overview

Though usually Edmund Burke is identified as the first to articulate the principles of a modern conservative political tradition, arguably he was preceded by a Scotsman who is better known for espousing a brilliant concept of skepticism. As Laurence Bongie notes, “David Hume was undoubtedly the eighteenth-century British writer whose works were most widely known and acclaimed on the Continent during the later Enlightenment period. Hume’s impact [in France] was of undeniable importance, greater even for a time than the related influence of Burke, although it represents a contribution to French counter-revolutionary thought which, unlike that of Burke, has been almost totally ignored by historians to this day.” The bulk of Bongie’s work consists of the writings of French readers of Hume who were confronted, first, by the ideology of human perfection and, finally, by the actual terrors of the French Revolution. Offered in French in the original edition of David Hume published by Oxford University Press in 1965, these vitally important writings have been translated by the author into English for the Liberty Fund second edition. In his foreword, Donald Livingston observes that “If conservatism is taken to be an intellectual critique of the first attempt at modern total revolution, then the first such event was not the French but the Puritan revolution, and the first systematic critique of this sort of act was given by Hume.”

Laurence L. Bongie is Professor Emeritus of French at the University of British Columbia.

Donald Livingston is Professor of Philosophy at Emory University.

Please note: This title is available as an ebook for purchase on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and iTunes.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780865972094
Publisher: Liberty Fund Inc.
Publication date: 02/01/2000
Edition description: 2ND
Pages: 235
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x 0.75(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

Table of Contents


Foreword vii Preface to the Liberty Fund Edition xi Introduction xiii I. Before 1789
1. Royal Panegyrics 1
2. The Science and Art of English History 2
3. Jehovah Among the Hebrews 10
4. Papist or Pyrrhonian? 15
5. The Scottish Bossuet 35
6. Debate with Turgot 54
7. Early Hostility: Mirabeau, Mably, and Brissot 60
8. Defence and Defiance 65
9. Anticipating the Storm 75 II. The Revolution and the Rôle of History
1. History as a Weapon of Counter-revolution 79
2. History as the Superstition of Slaves 93
III. From 1789 to the Trial of Louis XVI
1. Prophetic Parallels and the Counter-revolutionary Lessons of Hume 103
2. The Long Parliament: Brissot Versus Clermont-Tonnerre 123
3. A Republican Antidote: Catherine Macaulay-Graham 132 IV. The Trial of “Le Stuart Français”
1. Louis XVI and Charles I: A Condemned King’s Meditations 141
2. David Hume and Stuart History for the Defence 149
3. Cromwell in the Convention: The Judgement of Posterity 156
4. The Parallel Rejected: Brutus to the Rescue 165
5. Principles Versus Precedents 171 V. The Aftermath
1. Republican Qualms 177
2. Waiting for General Monk 186
3. Conclusion 196 Index of Names and Titles 203
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