Liberty and Obligations in George Grote's Athens

Autor: Liddel, Peter
Zdroj: Polis; January 2006, Vol. 23 Issue: 1 p140-161, 22p
Abstrakt: In this article it is suggested that George Grote's History of Greece (1846-56) employed a narrative history of Greece in an attempt to resolve the philosophical problem of the compatibility of individual liberty with considerable obligations to society. His philosophical achievement has been largely ignored by modern classical scholarship, even those who follow his lead in treating fifth-century Athens as the epitome of Greek civilization. The present reading of Grote's History is informed by John Stuart Mill's use of Athenian examples. Outlining the evidential, moral and spatial parameters of Grote's fifth-century Athens, it is argued that Grote understood fifth- century Athens to be a model intellectual and liberal society, in which the performance of obligations by citizens coexisted with individual and political liberty. Grote explained the decline of Athenian power in the fourth century BC by reference to the neglect of obligations, and in doing so, married historical explanation to political theory.
Databáze: Supplemental Index