Introduction: The Revision of History
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The present age is not merely an epoch of
discovery; it is also a period of revision of the various elements
of knowledge. Having recognised that there are no phenomena of which
the first cause is still accessible, science has resumed the
examination of her ancient certitudes, and has proved their
fragility. To-day she sees her ancient principles vanishing one by
one. Mechanics is losing its axioms, and matter, formerly the
eternal substratum of the worlds, becomes a simple aggregate of
ephemeral forces in transitory condensation.
Despite its conjectural side, by virtue of which it to some extent
escapes the severest form of criticism, history has not been free
from this universal revision. There is no longer a single one of its
phases of which we can say that it is certainly known. What appeared
to be definitely acquired is now once more put in question.
Among the events whose study seemed completed was the French
Revolution. Analysed by several generations of writers, one might
suppose it to be perfectly elucidated. What new thing can be said of
it, except in modification of some of its details?
And yet its most positive defenders are beginning to hesitate in
their judgments. Ancient evidence proves to be far from impeccable.
The faith in dogmas once held sacred is shaken. The latest
literature of the Revolution betrays these uncertainties. Having
related, men are more and more chary of drawing conclusions.
Not only are the heroes of this great drama discussed without
indulgence, but thinkers are asking whether the new dispensation
which followed the ancien regime would not have established itself
naturally, without violence, in the course of progressive
civilisation. The results obtained no longer seem in correspondence
either with their immediate cost or with the remoter consequences
which the Revolution evoked from the possibilities of history.
Several causes have led to the revision of this tragic period. Time
has calmed passions, numerous documents have gradually emerged from
the archives, and the historian is learning to interpret them
independently.
But it is perhaps modern psychology that has most effectually
influenced our ideas, by enabling us more surely to read men and the
motives of their conduct.
Among those of its discoveries which are henceforth applicable to
history we must mention, above all, a more profound understanding of
ancestral influences, the laws which rule the actions of the crowd,
data relating to the disaggregation of personality, mental
contagion, the unconscious formation of beliefs, and the distinction
between the various forms of logic.
To tell the truth, these applications of science, which are utilised
in this book, have not been so utilised hitherto. Historians have
generally stopped short at the study of documents, and even that
study is sufficient to excite the doubts of which I have spoken.
The great events which shape the destinies of peoples-- revolutions,
for example, and the outbreak of religious beliefs-- are sometimes
so difficult to explain that one must limit oneself to a mere
statement.
From the time of my first historical researches I have been struck
by the impenetrable aspect of certain essential phenomena, those
relating to the genesis of beliefs especially; I felt convinced that
something fundamental was lacking that was essential to their
interpretation. Reason having said all it could say, nothing more
could be expected of it, and other means must be sought of
comprehending what had not been elucidated.
For a long time these important questions remained obscure to me.
Extended travel, devoted to the study of the remnants of vanished
civilisations, had not done much to throw light upon them.
Reflecting upon it continually, I was forced to recognise that the
problem was composed of a series of other problems, which I should
have to study separately. This I did for a period of twenty years,
presenting the results of my researches in a succession of volumes.
One of the first was devoted to the study of the psychological laws
of the evolution of peoples. Having shown that the historic
races--that is, the races formed by the hazards of history--finally
acquired psychological characteristics as stable as their anatomical
characteristics, I attempted to explain how a people transforms its
institutions, its languages, and its arts. I explained in the same
work why it was that individual personalities, under the influence
of sudden variations of environment, might be entirely
disaggregated.
But besides the fixed collectivities formed by the peoples, there
are mobile and transitory collectivities known as crowds. Now these
crowds or mobs, by the aid of which the great movements of history
are accomplished, have characteristics absolutely different from
those of the individuals who compose them. What are these
characteristics, and how are they evolved? This new problem was
examined in The Psychology of the Crowd.
Only after these studies did I begin to perceive certain influences
which had escaped me.
But this was not all. Among the most important factors of history
one was preponderant--the factor of beliefs. How are these beliefs
born, and are they really rational and voluntary, as was long
taught? Are they not rather unconscious and independent of all
reason? A difficult question, which I dealt with in my last book,
Opinions and Beliefs.
So long as psychology regards beliefs as voluntary and rational they
will remain inexplicable. Having proved that they are usually
irrational and always involuntary, I was able to propound the
solution of this important problem; how it was that beliefs which no
reason could justify were admitted without difficulty by the most
enlightened spirits of all ages.
The solution of the historical difficulties which had so long been
sought was thenceforth obvious. I arrived at the conclusion that
beside the rational logic which conditions thought, and was formerly
regarded as our sole guide, there exist very different forms of
logic: affective logic, collective logic, and mystic logic, which
usually overrule the reason and engender the generative impulses of
our conduct.
This fact well established, it seemed to me evident that if a great
number of historical events are often uncomprehended, it is because
we seek to interpret them in the light of a logic which in reality
has very little influence upon their genesis.
All these researches, which are here summed up in a few lines,
demanded long years for their accomplishment. Despairing of
completing them, I abandoned them more than once to return to those
labours of the laboratory in which one is always sure of skirting
the truth and of acquiring fragments at least of certitude.
But while it is very interesting to explore the world of material
phenomena, it is still more so to decipher men, for which reason I
have always been led back to psychology.
Certain principles deduced from my researches appearing likely to
prove fruitful, I resolved to apply them to the study of concrete
instances, and was thus led to deal with the Psychology of
Revolutions--notably that of the French Revolution.
Proceeding in the analysis of our great Revolution, the greater part
of the opinions determined by the reading of books deserted me one
by one, although I had considered them unshakable.
To explain this period we must consider it as a whole, as many
historians have done. It is composed of phenomena simultaneous but
independent of one another.
Each of its phases reveals events engendered by psychological laws
working with the regularity of clockwork. The actors in this great
drama seem to move like the characters of a previously determined
drama. Each says what he must say, acts as he is bound to act.
To be sure, the actors in the revolutionary drama differed from
those of a written drama in that they had not studied their parts,
but these were dictated by invisible forces.
Precisely because they were subjected to the inevitable progression
of logics incomprehensible to them we see them as greatly astonished
by the events of which they were the heroes as are we ourselves.
Never did they suspect the invisible powers which forced them to
act. They were the masters neither of their fury nor their weakness.
They spoke in the name of reason, pretending to be guided by reason,
but in reality it was by no means reason that impelled them.
``The decisions for which we are so greatly reproached,'' wrote
Billaud-Varenne, ``were more often than otherwise not intended or
desired by us two days or even one day beforehand: the crisis alone
evoked them.''
Not that we must consider the events of the Revolution as dominated
by an imperious fatality. The readers of our works will know that we
recognise in the man of superior qualities the role of averting
fatalities. But he can dissociate himself only from a few of such,
and is often powerless before the sequence of events which even at
their origin could scarcely be ruled. The scientist knows how to
destroy the microbe before it has time to act, but he knows himself
powerless to prevent the evolution of the resulting malady.
When any question gives rise to violently contradictory opinions we
may be sure that it belongs to the province of beliefs and not to
that of knowledge.
We have shown in a preceding work that belief, of unconscious origin
and independent of all reason, can never be influenced by reason.
The Revolution, the work of believers, has seldom been judged by any
but believers. Execrated by some and praised by others, it has
remained one of those dogmas which are accepted or rejected as a
whole, without the intervention of rational logic.
Although in its beginnings a religious or political revolution may
very well be supported by rational elements, it is developed only by
the aid of mystic and affective elements which are absolutely
foreign to reason.
The historians who have judged the events of the French Revolution
in the name of rational logic could not comprehend them, since this
form of logic did not dictate them. As the actors of these events
themselves understood them but ill, we shall not be far from the
truth in saying that our Revolution was a phenomenon equally
misunderstood by those who caused it and by those who have described
it. At no period of history did men so little grasp the present, so
greatly ignore the past, and so poorly divine the future.
. . . The power of the Revolution did not reside in the
principles--which for that matter were anything but novel--which it
sought to propagate, nor in the institutions which it sought to
found. The people cares very little for institutions and even less
for doctrines. That the Revolution was potent indeed, that it made
France accept the violence, the murders, the ruin and the horror of
a frightful civil war, that finally it defended itself victoriously
against a Europe in arms, was due to the fact that it had founded
not a new system of government but a new religion.
Now history shows us how irresistible is the might of a strong
belief. Invincible Rome herself had to bow before the armies of
nomad shepherds illuminated by the faith of Mahommed. For the same
reason the kings of Europe could not resist the tatterdemalion
soldiers of the Convention. Like all apostles, they were ready to
immolate themselves in the sole end of propagating their beliefs,
which according to their dream were to renew the world.
The religion thus founded had the force of other religions, if not
their duration. Yet it did not perish without leaving indelible
traces, and its influence is active still.
We shall not consider the Revolution as a clean sweep in history, as
its apostles believed it. We know that to demonstrate their
intention of creating a world distinct from the old they initiated a
new era and professed to break entirely with all vestiges of the
past.
But the past never dies. It is even more truly within us than
without us. Against their will the reformers of the Revolution
remained saturated with the past, and could only continue, under
other names, the traditions of the monarchy, even exaggerating the
autocracy and centralisation of the old system. Tocqueville had no
difficulty in proving that the Revolution did little but overturn
that which was about to fall.
If in reality the Revolution destroyed but little it favoured the
fruition of certain ideas which continued thenceforth to develop.
The fraternity and liberty which it proclaimed never greatly seduced
the peoples, but equality became their gospel: the pivot of
socialism and of the entire evolution of modern democratic ideas. We
may therefore say that the Revolution did not end with the advent of
the Empire, nor with the successive restorations which followed it.
Secretly or in the light of day it has slowly unrolled itself and
still affects men's minds.
The study of the French Revolution to which a great part of this
book is devoted will perhaps deprive the reader of more than one
illusion, by proving to him that the books which recount the history
of the Revolution contain in reality a mass of legends very remote
from reality.
These legends will doubtless retain more life than history itself.
Do not regret this too greatly. It may interest a few philosophers
to know the truth, but the peoples will always prefer dreams.
Synthetising their ideal, such dreams will always constitute
powerful motives of action. One would lose courage were it not
sustained by false ideas, said Fontenelle. Joan of Arc, the Giants
of the Convention, the Imperial epic--all these dazzling images of
the past will always remain sources of hope in the gloomy hours that
follow defeat. They form part of that patrimony of illusions left us
by our fathers, whose power is often greater than that of reality.
The dream, the ideal, the legend--in a word, the unreal--it is that
which shapes history.
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