THE REVISION OF HISTORY
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.
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