[Human Nature In Politics by Graham Wallas]@TWC D-Link book
Human Nature In Politics

PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION ( 1920) This edition is, like the second edition ( 1910), a reprint, with a few verbal corrections, of the first edition ( 1908)
4/15

'There is,' says Aristotle, 'a way of living so brutish that it is only worth notice because many of those who can live any life they like make no better choice than did Sardanapalus.' The Greek thinkers started modern civilisation, because they insisted that the trading populations of their walled cities should force themselves to think out an answer to the question, what kind of life is good.

'The origin of the city-state,' says Aristotle, 'is that it enables us to live; its justification is that it enables us to live well.' Before the war, there were in London and New York, and Berlin, thousands of rich men and women as free to choose their way of life as was Sardanapalus, and as dissatisfied with their own choice.

Many of the sons and daughters of the owners of railways and coal mines and rubber plantations were 'fed up' with motoring or bridge, or even with the hunting and fishing which meant a frank resumption of palaeolithic life without the spur of palaeolithic hunger.

But my own work brought me into contact with an unprivileged class, whose degree of freedom was the special product of modern industrial civilisation, and on whose use of their freedom the future of civilisation may depend.

A clever young mechanic, at the age when the Wanderjahre of the medieval craftsman used to begin, would come home after tending a 'speeded up' machine from 8 A.M., with an hour's interval, till 5 P.M.At 6 P.M.he had finished his tea in the crowded living-room of his mother's house, and was 'free' to do what he liked.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books