Luigi
Speranza -- Grice e Canio: la filosofia romana sotto il principato di Caligola
-- il portico a Roma – filosofia italiana – Luigi Speranza (Roma). Filosofo italiano. Porch philosopher, martyred in the reign of CALIGULA
(si veda) and mentioned by BOEZIO in his Consolazione della filosofia. Member
of the Porch. One of those who opposed Caligola. When Caligola ordered C. to be
executed, C. is said to to have thanked him, and to have gone to meet his death
calmly and without apparent concern. He is admired for his exemplary demeanour
by Seneca and BOEZIO. Nome compiuto: Giulio Canio. Canio. Refs.: Luigi
Speranza, pel Gruppo di Gioco di H. P. Grice, “Grice e Canio,” The
Swimming-Pool Library, Villa Speranza, Liguria, Italia.
Luigi Speranza -- Grice e Cantoni:
il Kant fascista – filosofia italiana – Luigi Speranza (Gropello Cairoli). Filosofo
italiano. “Kant”. Filosofia fascista. Cantoni.
Refs.: Luigi Speranza, pel Gruppo di Gioco di H. P. Grice, “Grice e Cantoni,”
The Swimming-Pool Library, Villa Speranza, Liguria, Italia.
Luigi Speranza -- Grice e Cantoni:
l’implicatura conversazionale delle literae humaniores -- Romolo e Remo;
ovvero, il mito e la storia – scuola di Milano – filoofia milanese – filosofia
lombarda -- filosofia italiana – Luigi Speranza, pel Gruppo di Gioco di H. P.
Grice, The Swimming-Pool Library (Milano). Filosofo milanese.
Filosofo lombardo. Filosofo italiano. Milano, Lombardia. Grice: “You gotta love
Cantoni; I call him the Italian Hampshire! Cantoni
philosophises on ‘anthropology’ and he has not the least interest in past
philosophies, -- only contemporary! – Oddly, he reclaimed the good use of
‘primitive,’ meaning ‘originary,’ and he has philosophised on pleasure and
com-placent – also on ‘seduction,’ and eros. It is most interesting that he
reclaimed the concept of ‘umano,’ when dealing with anthropology, as he
considers the ‘disumano’, and the ‘crisi dell’uomo,’ and also the ‘desagio
dell’uomo’ – He has philosophised on the complex concept of the ‘tragic’ alla
Nietzsche – and he dared translate my métier and Fichte’s bestimmung as ‘la
missione dell’uomo’! – Like other Italian philosophers they joke at trouser
words and he has philosophised on ‘what Socrates actually said’! My favourite
is his treatise on Remo and Romolo in ‘mito e storia’. In opposizione alla
tradizione storicista, idealistica crociana si occupa di cultura e storia
usando contaminazioni sociologiche e antropologiche. Per queste aperture venne
considerato uno dei maggiori promotori dell'antropologia culturale in Italia.
Nel solco del maestro Banfi e uno dei maggiori esponenti della scuola di Milano. Oltre
ai numerosi volumi pubblicati fonda le riviste Studi filosofici e Il pensiero
critico. Fu allievo di Banfi, amico di Sereni e Formaggio. Nella cerchia
di amicizie di Banfi conobbe Antonia Pozzi che di lui si innamorò di amore non
corrisposto. In una lettera a Sereni ella scrisse. Non riesco nemmeno a trarre
un senso da tutti questi giorni che abbiamo vissuto insieme: sono qui, in
questa pausa di solitudine, come un po' d'acqua ferma per un attimo sopra un
masso sporgente in mezzo alla cascata, che aspetta di precipitare ancora. Vivo
come se un torrente mi attraversasse; tutto ha un senso di così immediata fine,
e è sogno che sa d'esser sogno, eppure mi strappa con così violente braccia via
dalla realtà. Sempre così smisuratamente perduta ai margini della vita
reale: difficilmente la vita reale mi avrà e se mi avrà sarà la fine di tutto
quello che c'è di meno banale in me. Forse davvero il mio destino sarà di
scrivere dei bei libri per i bambini che non avrò avuti. Povero Manzi: senza
saper niente, mi chiamava Tonia Kröger. E questi tuoi occhi che sono tutto un
mondo, con già scritta la tua data di morte. Un'ora sola in cui si guardi in
silenzio è tanto più vasta di tutte le possibili vite. C. define come primitivo
quel pensiero sincretico che non distingueva nettamente tra mito e realtà tra
affezione e razionalità. In questo senso "primitivo" assume una
valenza psicologica più che antropologica. Il pensiero mitico, scrive in
"Pensiero dei primitivi, preludio ad un'antropologia", non è
"arbitrario e caotico", ma pervaso di una razionalità, una razionalità
fusa in un crogiuolo affettivo. Yna delle differenze fondamentali tra il
pensiero moderno e quello primitivo consiste nel fatto che il pensiero moderno
ha una chiara coscienza della relazione e dell'intreccio delle varie forme
culturali tra loro e può sempre transitare da una all'altra quando lo voglia;
mentre noi sappiamo, ad esempio, che v'è un conflitto tra la scienza e la
religione, l'arte e la morale, il sogno e la realtà, il pensiero logico e la
creazione mitica, i primitivi mantengono tutte queste forme su di un piano
indistinto per cui fondono e confondono ciò che noi non sempre distinguiamo, ma
possiamo pur sempre distinguere. Questa mancanza di distinzioni nette è uno dei
caratteri più salienti della mentalità primitive. Quindi sogno e realtà
trapassano uno nell'altro e costituiscono nella loro saldatura un continuum
omogeneo. Si ocupa occupò con
prefazioni, traduzioni, curatele e altro di Kierkegaard, Dostoevskij,
Nietzsche, Kafka, Spinoza, Fichte, Renan, Hartmann, Huxley, Balzac, Jaspers,
Banfi, Durkheim, Sofocle e Musil. Altre saggi: “Il pensiero dei
primitivi, Milano: Garzanti); Estetica ed etica nel pensiero di Kierkegaard,
Milano: Denti); Crisi dell'uomo: il pensiero di Dostoevskij, Milano: Mondadori,
Milano: Il Saggiatore); La coscienza inquieta: Soren Kierkegaard, Milano:
Mondadori, Milano: Il Saggiatore; Mito e storia, Milano: Mondadori); La vita
quotidiana: ragguagli dell'epoca, Milano: Mondadori, (articoli apparsi su "Epoca"); n.
ed. Milano: Il Saggiatore); La coscienza mitica, Milano: Universitarie, (lezioni dell'anno accademico) Umano e
disumano, Milano: IEI); Il pensiero dei primitivi, Milano: La goliardica, Il
tragico come problema filosofico, Milano: La goliardica); La crisi dei valori e
la filosofia contemporanea: con appendice sullo storicismo, Milano, Goliardica;
Filosofia del mito, Milano: La goliardica); Il problema antropologico nella
filosofia contemporanea, Milano: La goliardica,
Tragico e senso comune, Cremona: Mangiarotti; Società e cultura, Milano:
Goliardica, Filosofie della storia e senso della vita, Milano: La goliardica,
Scienze umane e antropologia filosofica, Milano: La goliardica, Illusione e pregiudizio: l'uomo etnocentrico,
Milano: Saggiatore, Storicismo e scienze dell'uomo, Milano: La goliardica,
Personalità, anomia e sistema sociale, Milano: Goliardica); Che cosa ha
veramente detto Kafka, Roma: Ubaldini); Il significato del tragico, Milano: La
goliardica, Introduzione alle scienze umane, Milano: La goliardica); Che cosa
ha detto veramente Hartmann, Roma: Ubaldini,
Robert Musil e la crisi dell'uomo europeo, Milano: La goliardica, Milano:
Cuem); Persona, cultura e società nelle scienze umane, Milano:
Cisalpino-Goliardica); Antropologia quotidiana, Milano: Rizzoli); Il senso del
tragico e il piacere, prefazione di Abbagnano, Milano: Nuova, Kafka e il
disagio dell'uomo contemporaneo, con una nota di Montaleone, Milano: Unicopli). Attiva tra 1950 ed il 1962 e edita
dall'Istituto Editoriale Italiano
Lettere d'amore di Antonia Pozzi Carlo Montaleone, Cultura a Milano nel
dopoguerra. Filosofia e engagement in Remo Cantoni, Torino: Bollati
Boringhieri, Genna, «Il pensiero critico» di C., Firenze: Le Lettere,
Massimiliano Cappuccio e Alessandro Sardi, Remo Cantoni, Milano: Cuem, Reda,
L'antropologia filosofica di Remo Cantoni. Miti come arabeschi, Fondazione Ugo
Spirito, Antonia Pozzi Antonio Banfi Scuola di Milano Altri progetti Collabora
a Wikiquote Citazionio su Remo Cantoni Collabora a Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia
Commons contiene immagini o altri file su Remo Cantoni sito di Antonia Pozzi, su antoniapozzi. Filosofia
Letteratura Letteratura Università Università Filosofo Accademici italiani Professore
Milano MilanoStudenti dell'Università degli Studi di MilanoProfessori
dell'Università degli Studi di Cagliari Professori della SapienzaRomaProfessori
dell'Università degli Studi di PaviaProfessori dell'Università degli Studi di
Milano Fondatori di riviste italiane Direttori di periodici italiani. Haverfield. The
Study of Philosophy at Oxford
A LECTURE DELIVERED TO UNDERGRADUATES READING FOR
THE LITERAE HUMANIORES SCHOOL. Lectures are seldom published singly
unless they have been read on ceremonial occasions to a general
audience and to which their style and subject are suitable. My present lecture
is not of that kind, since it is addressed to mere pupils, or ‘under-graduates’
– those below the minimum qualification here at Oxford, the B. A. But I am
delivering it to undergraduates beginning the study of philosophy at
Oxford, since H. P. Grice thought it would be a good idea, especially for those
pupils coming from, of all places, Italy. The purpose of my lecture, then, is
to set out in the plainest words the main features of that study. It aims
at emphasising three points. First, the need well known to all, but
realised by few, of the chronology of philosophy (e. g. Locke – Hume –
Berkeley) -- and still more of
geography (Cambridge to the south-west of Oxford), as geography is now
understood, in any study of philosophy (where is Koenigsberg?). Second,
the character of the Oxford philosophy course as a study of rather short
periods – say, philosophical analysis between the two world wars, to echo the
title of J. O. Urmson’s essay -- based on a close reading of the
authorities: H. P. Grice, and his followers. Third, the relation between Italian
and Oxonian philosophy – none -which by their very differences supplement each other
to an extent which learners and even teachers do not always see what is
not there to be seen. At the end I will say a word or two – but not in Italian!
-- about the connection between this course and the training of
future researchers. Some of my colleagues, who kindly read the lecture in
typescript, told me that, if published, it would help “those Italian pupils”
and interest others elsewhere who have to do with the study of philosophy. I
once had a pupil who began his Oxford course by reading for Classical
Honour Moderations. Reasons which I have forgotten made him change his plans
after a term or so. He took up Pass Moderations instead and I had
to teach him for that examination! He was very confident that he could
surmount the Pass hedges with complete ease, but I had soon to tell him
that the work he had done for Honours would lead him straight to a
heavy fall. He could translate Berkeley alright, or most parts of them. But
he had just no idea whatever of getting up its content – what Berkeley
meant --, and when one asked him the usual question, 'He meant what? ',
he was beaten. The difference which my pupil found to exist between
Pass and Honour Moderations is almost exactly the difference which, even
after recent changes, still divides Honour Moderations from “Literae
Humaniores”. This difference is not so much, as the language of our
Oxford statutes might suggest, a contrast between the classics on the one
hand and Ordinary-Language Philosophy on the other. It is, rather, a
variety of the old difference between Aoyoy and e'pyoz/, between
the language which is the form, and the fact, which is the content. I am
told that, in reading for Honour Moderations, a man learns how to
translate Cicero – or “Cicerone,” as the Italians miscall him -- and to
imitate his style. I know, by my own experience, that he hardly ever
learns what Cicero MEANT. A pupil may scramble through any page of the ACCADEMICA
with whih he shall be confronted, and you’ll soon find out that he is utterly
unable reproduce the matter of what CICERONE meant for any purpose whatever,
and if you ask him in detail why Cicerone called the thing “Accademica”, the
chances are that he does not know – or worse, care. In reading for
Greats, a man goes almost to the *other* extreme. Whether he can
translate CICERONE into reasonable Oxonian becomes a trite point. What he
has to know and what, I think, in general he does know, is what
Cicero MEANS – not just in ACCADEMICA, but in the concept of the ‘probabile’.
He may not know it with all the refinements and shades of meaning that an
accurate scholar such as Grice shall detect, but he does get a sound
general idea of Cicero's meaning – if not his ‘implicature,’ as I say. His danger now is that he neglects the
form. He is bidden to compose ‘the essay’ on a philosophical topic every week
for FIVE years! These essays are only too often ayamV/zara e? rb
irapaxpfjpa, agonised efforts at the eleventh hour, and, even if they rise
superior to such human frailty and are result of exhaustive and deliberate
reading in the dark chambers of the Sheldonian, both teacher and taught
tend to set more value on the essay’s *content* than on its *form* -- or
deliverance: lots of ‘ums’ to be expected. Sixty or eighty years ago the “Literae
Humaniores” School was considered to give a special training in lucidity
of language and in logical arrangement of matter. That has gone into the
background. Of the three great intellectual excellences which this School
might develop, powerful thought and profound knowledge and clear style,
the third now counts as least, if you can believe me. It is not a good resul, but
it is a natural one in a course which is so closely connected with concepts
and facts. Facts are the first need of the student of philosophy: who
wrote the Critique of Pure Reason, and why? Why did he choose such an obscure
Teutonic idiom to express his vague idea? He must know 'who did what when,’ and
hopefully, ‘where.’ Indeed, if he knows the facts of philosophy in the
order which they occurred (Anassagora after Anassimandro), he can often
reconstruct and interpret the long history of philosophy for himself.
There is a vast deal more value in dates than the most early Victorian
schoolmistress ever suggested to her classes. Half the mistakes and
misunderstandings in our current notions of modern Oxonian philosophy arise
from some belief that events – i. e. the publication of books, etc. -- happened
at OTHER than their actual dates. Much, for example, has been written
about the causes of the decline and fall of the Roman Empire, but why did
Marcus Aurelius addressed his memories to HIS SELF? Among these causes the
depopulation of Italy and of the Roman Provinces has been quoted as one
of the most important reasons for the creation of Oxford. But, when one
comes to examine the facts, it appears that a great deal that is urged
under this head is a transference to the Empire of an agrarian evil
which belonged to the Republican period and which probably lasted
only for three or four generations. Those who hold this evil wholly responsible
for the fall of the Empire, start with a chronological blunder, and
naturally do not reach even a plausible solution of their problem, as
Nerone would! So again in smaller problems. The critics of the Roman
Emperor CLAUDIO, the ancient parallel (as is generally said) to James I
(who reined over Oxford) usually omit to notice what sorts of events
occurred in what parts of his reign. As it happens, dates show that he,
or maybe his ministers, began with an active and excellent
policy. They boldly faced foreign frontier questions which had been
neglected or mismanaged by their immediate predecessors. They took steps
to amalgamate the Empire by romanizing the provincials. They
carried out numerous and useful public works. Dates also show that,
after some six or seven years of good administration, they fell
intelligibly enough into evil ways. We might indeed apply to Claudius the
idea of a quinquennium of five years' wise rule which is usually
ascribed to Nero. And curiously enough, if we go to the bottom of the
facts about Nero, we find that the outset of his rule was marked by no
want of unwisdom and crime and that the notion of a happy first five
years is a modern misinterpretation of an ancient writer who meant
something quite different. Begin history therefore with the plain task of
knowing dates and facts. Write them out large if you will, and stick them
up over your bed and your bath. There is another simple-seeming
subject which students of history, and above all of ancient
history, must not neglect. I have mentioned the old question, ' who
did what when ? ' There is an equally important question, 'who did what
where?' It is no good studying history, and above all ancient history, without
studying geography, and geography of the right sort. The subject is, of
course, held in little honour even at some Universities. Cambridge
lately issued a small series of maps to illustrate an elaborate
work on mediaeval history. On the first, or it may be the second, of these
maps, London is shown to be 33 miles from York and 43 miles from Paris,
while the sea passage from Dover to Calais is about 4 miles long.
This is, no doubt, an exceptional view of the world. But our ordinary
attitude to geography is little more satisfactory. Very often, when we admit
the subject at all, we confine it to lists of place-names and of
political boundaries, which are mere abstractions and convey
nothing definite to the average student. Or else, under the title of
geography, we bring in the important, but quite distinct study, of the
topography of battle-fields, a study which is not really geographical,
which is specialist in character, and which is suited properly to
those who are particularly interested in the details of ancient tactics
and strategy. If we are to make anything of geography, we must get beyond this.
We must treat it as the science which tells us about the influence
(in the widest sense) of the surface of the earth on the men who dwelt
upon it. In the earlier ages of mankind this influence was
enormous. It was far greater than it is in the present day : it was
greater even than in the Middle Ages. In the youth of the world, in the
days which we are still apt to picture to ourselves as the ages of
innocence and unconstrained simplicity and pastoral happiness, mankind
lived in fear. He knew he was weak, weak alike in his conflict with
nature and his conflict with the violence of other men. Whenever he
advanced a little in civilization, in wealth, in comfort, he was beset
by terror lest hostile outside forces should break in and destroy
him and his civilization together. If he looked back over preceding ages,
he found one long tale of wreckage, of nations that went down whole to a disastrous
death, of towns stormed at midnight and destroyed utterly before dawn, of
unquenchable plagues, of consuming famines. These evils came from many
causes. But among the causes the character of the earth's surface is by
no means the least potent, though it may not seem the most obvious. Man
had not then learnt to tunnel through mountains and traverse the worst
and widest seas, and thus ride superior to the great barriers which
nature has set between human intercourse. Nor had he acquired that
coherence of political government and social system which can sometimes
defy mountains or seas and successfully battle with pestilence and
hunger. He was ruled by his geographical environment. The
form in which this environment affected him was very definite. It was the
broad features of the earth's surface which then especially influenced
mankind that is, the general distribution of hills and of plains, of
mountain heights and mountain passes, of river valleys and of gorges
breaking these valleys up, of harbours and rocky coasts, of trade winds
which brought or failed to bring rain. All the simple and general
physical conditions which affect comparatively large areas in a more or
less uniform way, were felt to the full by the Greek and Roman
world. Illustrations of their influence are strewn broadcast over the
shores of the Mediterranean. That sea itself provides perhaps as
good an example as any. To-day it is a sea that belongs to many nations
; one dominant power in it is not even a Mediterranean state. Under
the Roman Empire, it was the basis of one state whose capital lay in its
centre and whose provinces lay all around it like a ring-fence. The
cause is to be found in geography. The Mediterranean is not merely,
as its name implies, a sea in the middle of the land : it has more
notable features. Though it is the largest of all inland seas, it is also
the most uniform. Its climate is the same throughout its length and
breadth ; its coasts are equally habitable in almost every quarter ;
therefore, it easily attracts round it a more or less uniform population
and men move freely to and fro upon it. It is no mere epigram that
Algeria is the south coast of Europe. Moreover, as modern strategists
have noted, it is dominated, as no other sea is, by the lands which
surround it and by the peninsulas and islands which mark it. Therefore,
it was singularly fitted to form the basis of any Empire strong enough to
control so large an area. It aided the formation of the Roman Empire.
It determined parts of its constitution, notably its semi-federal
provincial system. It provided the unity needful for its trade and
language and intercourse. We can mark the influence of this sea even in
pre-Roman politics. Though it was then divided up between Greeks,
Persians, Carthaginians, none of them were able to hold a part of it
without at least aspiring to extend their sway over the whole. Only in
the present day, when political unions have become stronger and
more coherent, is it possible for geography to be put in the
background. Let me give two more illustrations. To-day Italy
is a south-eastern power: she looks to Tripoli and the Levant, she finds
her outlets and she passes on her traffic from Brindisi eastwards, and
her sons are scattered over the eastern Mediterranean. But geographically
if I may repeat a saying which is trite but nevertheless valuable ' Italy
looks west and Greece looks east', and in the Graeco-Roman world this
fact counted. Thanks to it, the earlier Roman Empire, the Empire of
Augustus and Claudius and Trajan, was a west- European realm, and its
greatest achievements of conquest and of civilization lay in the western
lands which we still call Latin or Romance. That French is spoken
in France to-day is (if indirectly) a result of geography. Once more,
under the normal conditions of to-day food is brought to our great towns
from considerable distances along railways or good roads. We are
not much troubled by geographical obstacles; we find human nature a much
worse impediment, and a strike hinders far more than any mountain or
river. In the ancient world as indeed in parts of the mediaeval
world when food was carried along ill-made roads in / ill-made carts,
towns were impossible unless food-stuffs could be grown close by, and
landed estates could not be worked at a profit unless markets lay within
easy reach. Throughout, we see the Greeks and the Romans face to
face with an external nature which dominated them as it does not dominate
us. If they were not, like the prehistoric races, living in ceaseless
dread, they were slaves to rudimentary difficulties. It is these
natural circumstances of geography that we cannot omit from our study of
ancient history. Hang up your maps beside your tables of dates ; draw maps
of your own, and if you would remember them properly, measure the
distances upon them. I venture to recommend this method of
studying geography along with history for a further reason. It is
the best way of studying geography itself which ordinary students can
use. The pure geographer too often wishes to teach the facts of the
earth's surface as facts by themselves. He wishes, for instance,
that the student should know the whole configuration of France, its
mountains, rivers, geology, minerals, before he proceeds to realize the
effects of these various features on the history of the world. That is
all very well for the specialist. But, as one who has taught
geography in Oxford for a good many years, I am convinced that applied
geography is far more easily learnt by the ordinary man than this more
theoretical and abstract science. By applied geography I mean the
geography of a district studied in definite relation to its history, with
definite recognition of which geographical features mattered in one age, and
which in another, and which in none at all. This method involves
that association of ideas, that learning of things in connexion with other
things, which is in truth the most stimulating and helpful of all aids to
knowledge. Here, as elsewhere, the motto of the teacher should be
o-vv re 8v epxo/jLvc, not in the sense of the teacher marching
along with the taught, but of two kinds of knowledge helping one
another. 4. From these preliminaries of time and space I pass
to the actual study of ancient history in Oxford. The chief
characteristic of that study is its limitation to short and strictly
defined periods. Among these periods several alternative choices are
intentionally left open to the student. In Greek history he may read, as
most men do, the Making of Greece and the Great Age of the fifth
century. Or he may combine the fifth century with the story of
Epaminondas and Demosthenes and that curiously modern figure, Phocion,
though, for some reason, he will here find few companions in his
studies. In Roman history he may study the death-agony of the
Republic and the beginnings of the Empire under the strange
Julio-Claudian dynasty. Or he may confine himself to the Empire and
follow its fortunes till the end of Trajan's wars. Or thirdly he may read
though few care to do so the tale of the conquest of Italy and of
Carthage, the days which formed the great age of the Republic and the
glory of the Senate. In any case he is confined to one definite epoch of
no excessive length. Secondly, he will read this epoch
carefully with many and certainly all the most important of
the original literary authorities, and these he will read in the
original tongues. The study of a period of history through the medium of
translations is one which finds no place, at least in theory, in our
Oxford ancient history. This is a point, perhaps, which deserves
some notice in passing. In the present condition of classical
studies there is a strong tendency for men not merely to study ancient
history but even to research, with a very slight knowledge of the
classical languages. In the local archaeology of our own country this
tendency has existed for centuries, and' it has been usual to work
at Roman Britain without any knowledge at all of Latin. Abroad, the
tendency has been growing of late years. I have had lately to write for a
foreign publication a paper in Latin on some Roman inscriptions and I
have been a little surprised at the Ciceronian words which the editor of
the publication has pointed out to me as too likely to puzzle present-day
students of Latin epigraphy. Now, it is probable that an educational
course which studied Greek and Roman history through translations might
have a distinct, though obviously a limited, educational value. But it is
idle to pretend to go beyond a somewhat elementary course without
knowing the ancient languages. This Oxford course has been made the
subject of many criticisms. We are told that history is one and
indivisible, and that fragments cut out of their context not only lose
their educational value but become meaningless. We are told secondly that
it is absurd to omit all the momentous occurrences which lie
outside our limited areas. We are told also that by confining
students to one or even two periods we prevent them from acquiring a
variety of distinct interests and discussing their various periods together and
widening their respective outlooks. Of the first of these I shall say
something in a moment. The other two in my judgement amount to very
little. It is quite true that our system omits a great deal. But there
are after all only two ways of learning. You can learn a little of many
things or you can learn much of one thing. Unless you are a genius
or a reformer you cannot learn a great deal about many things. All
education is in a sense selective. Here, as so often, much good may be
done by the free lance. He prevents our selections from being
clogged by pedantry. In the end, however, there must be selection.
Lastly, the third criticism, that the use of limited periods limits the
total width of interest and discussion among the body of students, does
not I believe apply in the very least to our own system with its
alternative periods and its extraordinary range of general
knowledge. Moreover, I am clear that, if a limitation of
periods has its evils, it has also solid merits. It has been
generally the English tradition to prefer the plan of learning much about
one subject to that of learning a little about many, and the warning Cave
hominem unius libri used often to be quoted by Oxford scholars of
forty or fifty years ago. It is a good maxim. For it does not simply warn
us against the tortoise who hides in his shell ; it points out that the
dangerous enemy is he who knows one subject with exceeding
thoroughness, who controls one weapon with absolute mastery and
precision. The student who really works out one short period of history,
knows one part at least of the ways of human nature. It is impossible to
over-rate the practical value of such a bit of accurate knowledge of
how men move and think and act. Moreover, as educationalists are
constantly and rightly observing, the power of thoroughly getting up a
limited subject, the complete mastery of all the relevant details,
is a very valuable power in actual life. It may be obtained in
other ways than through a brief period of ancient history; it could not
be gained by a study of ancient history at large. 5. Ancient
History is singularly suited to this method of the intensive culture of a
small plot. If the period chosen be not very long or very ill-chosen, it
is here possible to combine the following advantages. First, we can
bring the student into touch with periods of the highest importance,
periods which are full of the most diverse interests and which allow the
most different minds to expand on political or constitutional or
economic or geographical or military problems. Secondly, we let him
come to close quarters with the great mass of the original authorities,
whether written or unwritten, so that he can compare the account of any
event or problem which is given him by Grote, or Bury, or his own
tutor, with the actual evidence on which it ought to be based. Thirdly,
he can work at historical writings written in the great style and really
worth reading as literature. There is no part of mediaeval or
modern history of which all this can be said with complete truth.
There we have to face multitudes of charters, family papers, legal
documents, broadsides, which are far too vast a chaos for a student to
overhaul in the course of his University career, and to compare with
the conclusions based on them. There, too, our authorities are for the most
part not even literature by courtesy. When we ask for original
authorities, we are given not a Gibbon but a mass of matter which has no
value save as the husk, too often the tasteless husk, outside a
grain of fact. In ancient history, when all is said and done, when
the longest list of ' books to read ' has been made out that the most
conscientious tutor can devise, the total will not exceed the powers of a
reasonable student. You will find, indeed, when it comes to lists of '
books to read', that the philosophical teachers, not the historical
teachers, will go to the greatest length. 6. I have only one
criticism of my own to make : our limited period does ignore the unity of
history. We ought to do something for a view of history as a whole.
Let me quote a historian who is not, I fear, as much admired in Oxford as
he used to be, the late Mr. E. A. Freeman. He was a writer of the old
school, on the one hand much too fond of battles, sensations,
emotions, and even rhetoric, and on the other hand much too
dependent on written sources and too cold to the charms of archaeology.
Perhaps his true greatness lay in the realism with which he taught some
of the greater general historical ideas even though he hammered
them home with a wearying emphasis. One such idea of his was the unity of
history, on which I will quote one of his utterances: We are
learning that European history, from its first glimmerings to our own
day, is one unbroken drama, no part of which can be rightly understood
without reference to the other parts which come before it and after
it. We are learning that of this great drama Rome is the centre, the
point to which all roads lead and from which all roads lead no less. The
world of independent Greece stands on one side of it ; the world of
modern Europe stands on another. But the history alike of the great
centre itself and of its satellites on either side, can never be fully
grasped except from a point of view wide enough to take in the whole
group and to mark the relations of each of its members to the centre and
to one another. These are true words ; how can they be
reconciled with our limited periods ? It may occur to some that we
lecturers should prefix or add to our ordinary courses some special hours
on universal history. Time, however, would hardly allow for more than
eight or ten such lectures ; the lectures themselves could hardly be
other than in some sense popular, and it is possible that they
would be better read in a book than delivered as a dictation lesson.
There is another remedy in each man's hand who cares at all for the
historical side of his Schools' work. He can read what he likes of
other and later periods of history in such books as may suit his
own taste. Even on the lowest plane of motives such reading would not be
wasted. It may be less true than it was, that Greats is concerned de
rebus omnibus et quibusdam aliis. But it is still true that there is
very little knowledge which does not at some point or other help in
the understanding of Greats' work. It is a School in which a man can '
improve his class ' by not reading directly for it. Let me now pass
to the two individual topics of Greek and Roman History with which Oxford
students are concerned. People are apt to think that they are just
the same. The educational system which has dominated Western Europe for
the last three centuries sets the Greek and Latin, language, literature,
and history, side by side, as subjects which may be studied and
taught by the same men and the same methods. Even now it is supposed in
some places of instruction, that a man who is competent, perhaps
extremely competent, to teach Greek History, will be equally competent
to teach any part of Roman History. But we are beginning to learn that
Greece and Italy are not the twins which they seemed to our forefathers.
We know that the Greek and Latin languages stood in their origins
far apart ; that Latin, for example, comes nearer to Celtic than to Greek
; and we shall have to recognize something of the sort in reference to
Greek and Roman History. But here fortune favours us in a
remarkable and indeed quite undeserved fashion. For these two
subjects are in reality so dissimilar that their very differences form a
rare and splendid combination. Each supplies what the other lacks.
Together, they remedy many of the evils which arise from the limitation
of the periods studied. They differ, firstly, in the character of
the original authorities for the two subjects and in the different
historical methods which the student is constantly required to use. They
differ, secondly, in the actual events which they record and in the
kinds of lessons which they teach. The one shows us character and
the other genius. The one confronts us with the city state, the other
with the full range of problems of a world empire. The one exhibits
the different forms of political development proper to the brief
life of Greece, the other the principles of constitutional growth which was
gradually unrolled in the long history of Rome. 8. First, as
to the authorities. Alike in his Greek and in his Roman history, the
Oxford learner has to deal with a large part of the original authorities
for the periods which he is studying; he has to study those periods
with definite reference to the evidence of the authorities, to appraise
their general value and to criticize in detail the meaning of their
various assertions. But these authorities are by no means uniform.
On the contrary, those which he meets in Greek History and those which he
meets in Roman History are startlingly unlike. The history of
Greece, at least during the great age of the fifth century, depends
on two first-rate historians, whose works have reached us intact, and who
form the predominant and often the only authorities for the series of
events which they describe, Herodotus and Thucydides. Everything
else that we know of this age can be hung by way of comment or criticism,
foot-note or appendix, on their narratives. The evidence of lesser
writers, of geographical facts, of inscriptions or sculptures or pottery,
may be and often is very valuable, but it is always subsidiary. This is
especially true of Greek inscriptions, which I mention here partly because I
shall have presently to say something of the very different
character of Roman inscriptions. By far the largest and the most
important sections of Greek inscriptions are lengthy legal or financial
or administrative documents, such as in modern times would be engrossed
on parchment or printed on paper. They are, indeed, just like those
documents which the student of early English History finds selected and
edited for him by Bishop Stubbs. There are, no doubt, other Greek
inscriptions, such as tombstones. But the epitaphs of Hellas can rarely
be dated ; they rarely belong to the historical periods studied in
Oxford, and they rarely say enough about the careers or official
positions of the dead, or of their heirs and kinsfolk, to be used for
historical inductions. Like Stubbs* charters, therefore, Greek inscriptions
are best suited to provide the foot-notes and technical appendices to
connected literary narratives. It is a curious and a pleasant chance
which has given us for a unique period of history both admirable
narratives and a copious supply of supplementary inscriptions.
Turn now to Roman History. The Roman historian has a different and
more difficult task than his Greek colleague. In the long roll of
centuries which form his subject, the literary narrative and the
subsidiary evidence are often defective and seldom united. Not one
single writer is at the same time a great writer and contemporary and
continuous. The Republic has been described for us by authors who either,
like Livy, wrote long after most of the events which they describe,
or who lived at the time, like Cicero, but wrote no continuous history,
while it is painfully true that most of the ancient writers on the
Republic have little claim to be called good historians. Nor is this all.
These writers, good or bad, Polybius or Livy or Appian, are very
imperfectly preserved ; our stuff is fragmentary. We have to deal with a
mosaic that has been shaken in pieces : we have to form our picture out
of patchwork. Nor, lastly, is there supplementary evidence to aid
us. Archaeology throws singularly little light upon the history of
the Republic. Excavations, like those of Adolf Schulten at Numantia, have
shed some light, and there is no doubt more to come when Spain has
been better opened up : more also may perhaps be gleaned some day
from southern Gaul. But the Republic was one of those states which mark
the world, but not individual sites, by their achievements. Such in
Greece was Sparta : and, as Thucydides saw long ago, the history of
such States must always lack archaeological evidence. The Roman
Empire was in many ways a new epoch. It is natural that the authorities
on which our knowledge rests should be in some respects unlike those of
the Republic. Continuous literary narratives are still few, and
their value is not very great. Like many important political
organizations, the Roman Empire was only half understood by the men who
lived in and under it or perhaps, as Kipling says of the English, those
who understood did not care to speak. Not even the greatest of the
Imperial historians, Tacitus, appreciated the state which he served and
described. He gives his readers, for home politics, a backstairs view of
court intrigues, and, for foreign affairs, a row of picturesque or
emotional pictures of distant and difficult campaigns described
with a total absence of technical detail and a surfeit of ethical or
rhetorical colouring. All the real history of the centuries of the Empire
was ignored by almost every one of those Romans or Romanized Greeks
who essayed to describe it. Moreover, this literary material, like that
of the Republic, is broken by all manner of gaps. We have painfully to
reconstruct our narrative out of detached sentences and chance fragments
and waifs and strays from works which have perished. On the
other hand and here the difference between Republic and Empire comes out
clearest the archaeological evidence for the Empire is extensive and
extraordinary. No state has left behind it such abundant and instructive
remains as the Roman Empire. Inscriptions by hundreds of thousands, coins
of all dates and mints, ruins of fortresses, towns, country-houses,
farms, roads, supply the great gaps in the written record and
correct the great misunderstandings of those who wrote it. Most of
this evidence has been uncovered in the last two generations : the
Empire, misdescribed by its own Romans, has risen from the earth to
vindicate itself before us. The largest part of this new material is
supplied by the inscriptions. A few of these are documents, such as
form the bulk of the Greek inscriptions which I have mentioned already,
and of those few some five or six at least are perhaps of greater
importance than any other inscription, Greek or Roman, that has yet been found.
But the great mass are not in themselves individually striking.
Their value depends not on any special merits of their own, but on the
extent to which they can be combined with some hundreds of other similar
inscriptions. If Roman History is the record of extraordinary deeds
done by ordinary men, it is also a record of extraordinary facts proved
by the most ordinary and commonplace evidence. The details directly
commemorated in the tombstones or the dedications or similar inscriptions
which come before us seldom matter much. It is no great gain to learn
that water was laid on to one fort in one year and a granary rebuilt in
another fort a dozen years later. But if you tabulate some hundreds
or thousands of these inscriptions, they reveal secrets. Take, for
instance, the birth-places of the soldiers, which are generally mentioned
on their tombstones. Each by itself is a trifle. It is quite unimportant
that a man came from Provence to die in Chester or from Asia Minor to
serve at York. But, taken together, these birth-places tell us the whole
relation of the imperial army to the Roman Empire. We can see the state
gradually drawing its recruits from outer and yet outer rings of
population. We can see the provincials beginning to garrison their own
provinces. We can see the growth of that barbarization which befell the Empire
when it was compelled, in its long struggle against its invaders, to
enlist barbarians against themselves. From similar evidence we can
deduce the size of each provincial army ; we can even catalogue the
regiments which composed it at various dates and the fortresses which it
occupied, and can trace the strengthening or the decay of the system of
frontier defence. It is true, indeed, that inscriptions of this
character are not very easy for students to deal with. For they have to
be taken in unmanageable masses, and they often involve remote problems
of dating and interpretation. But selections, such as those of Wilmanns
or Dessau, will help the learner through, and the short courses on Roman
Epigraphy which are now given in Oxford will start him on his road.
I do not know whether I shall seem an unbending conservative or a
hopeless optimist or a liberal who is trying to make the best of a bad
business. But the facts which I have just stated suggest to me that,
in respect of the training which they give x in historical method,
Greek and Roman History, as studied in Oxford, fit into each other and
supplement each other in a most happy manner. . Almost every form of
authority, the first-rate narrative, the second-rate abridgement,
the stray fragment, the long legal document, the brief inscription of
whatever kind, all the varieties of uninscribed evidence, come before him
in turn. He has to consider and weigh these, and, whether he proposes in
after life to research in history or prefers the active business of
trade or politics, he will gain much by the criticism which this task
imposes on him. To survey many statements made by fairly intelligent men, many
accounts of complicated and obscure incidents, is to train the
judgement for practical life quite as much as for a learned career. We
talk somewhat professionally of archaeological evidence. It is well to
remember that, if that evidence had happened to refer to the
present, instead of the past, we should call it economic and not
archaeological : so much of it refers to just the things which engage the
reader of an ordinary social pamphlet. If Greek and Roman History thus
supplement each other in respect of historical methods, they do so
still more in respect of the historical problems of political life and of
human nature which they bring before us. In one or the other of them we
find most of our modern difficulties somehow raised, and in many
cases one aspect is raised in Greek History, another in Roman. In the
first place, there is the contrast of character and genius, which is
really the twofold contrast of individualism as opposed to common action
and of intellect as opposed to practical common sense. Greek
History is a record of men who were extraordinarily individual, extraordinarily
clever, extraordinarily disunited. Our Oxford study of Greek History,
divorced as it is by chance or necessity from the study of Greek poetical
literature and of Greek art, lets us forget how amazingly clever the
Greeks were and the place which intellect and language and writing
played in their world. Roman History, on the other hand, is
the record of men who possessed little ability and little intellect,
but great force of character and great willingness to com- bine for
the good of their country to produce a result which was not the work of
any one of them. The history of the Roman Republic in its best period,
in the great age of the Punic wars, is in very truth ' a long roll
of extraordinary deeds done by ordinary men '. This aspect of it is, of
course, less prominent in the later Republic, the period of revolution,
than in the greater epoch which we here so seldom study. But it
reappears with the Empire. Though the historians of the Principate
generally talk of nothing but the Princeps, we can detect throughout a
background of hard-working, capable, probably rather stupid
governors and generals in the provinces. If any one wishes to study
the conflict of genius and character, that conflict which a hundred years
ago the English waged with Napoleon, and to realize the defects of being
clever and the advantages of being stupid defects and advantages which
(I am bound to say) are overrated by the average Englishman he will find
this in his Greek and Roman History. There are few lessons for guidance
in practical life and politics which are so valuable as an under-
standing of this simple-seeming subject. Again, in respect of
constitutional history, Greece and Rome supplement one another in a
useful way. The history of Greece, and especially of Athens, is too
short to include a long and orderly constitutional development. But it
does teach a good deal about the nature and value of those paper constitutions
which are in reality political rather than constitutional, but
which play their part more particularly in the acuter crises of
almost all ages. Rome, too, in the earlier part of the death-agony of the
Republic, in the generation which began with the Gracchi and ended with
-Sulla, saw several of these pseudo-constitutions. But the Athenian
examples teach us most, if only because they are the work of an
intellectual race, which believed firmly in the value of things which
could be written down on paper. Rome, on the other hand,
shows that slow growth, here a little and there a little, of
constitutional life on which true constitutional philosophy is based.
Nowhere can we find so near a parallel to our English constitu-
tion as meets us in the flexible order of the Roman Republic and Empire.
Nor is this all. Of most con- stitutions, as of our own, we know the
maturer years, but not the details of the birth and infancy. But the
Roman Empire is, as it were, born before our eyes. The cold
unostentatious caution of Augustus may, no doubt, have left his
contemporaries a little doubtful whether the old had really died and the
new been born, and the scanty records which have survived shed an
uncertain light. Yet the fact is plain, and the manner in which it
happened. ii. And thirdly, Greek history sets forth the
successes and failures of small states and of ' municipal republics
', while Rome exhibits the complex government of an extensive
Empire. For the present day the second matters most. Perhaps the world
will never see again a dominion of city-states. The fate of the Polis
was sealed when Plato wrote his Politeia and called for
philosopher-kings. It was more decisively settled when the Romans
discovered that men could be at once citizens of a nation and citizens of
a town. The failures of the mediaeval Republics of Italy and Germany
to maintain themselves against the stronger powers of Emperors and
Tyrants simply emphasized the result. The world will have to supply
otherwise that intellectual and artistic splendour which has been the
finest fruit of the city-states. But the administration of a
great Empire concerns many men to-day and in a very vital manner.
Our age has not altogether solved the pro- blems which Empires seem to
raise by their very size the gigantic assaults of plague and famine, the
stubborn resistance of ancient civilizations and nationalities to
new and foreign ideals, the weakness of far-flung frontiers ; it
can hardly find men enough who are fit to carry on the routine of
government in distant lands. The old world was no better off. Too often,
its Empires quickly perished ; too often, they survived only through
cruelty and massacre and outrage. Rome alone did not wholly fail.
It kept its frontiers unbroken for centuries. It spread its civilization
harmoniously over western and central Europe and northern Africa. It
passed on the classical culture to new races and to the modern world.
It embraced in its orderly rule the largest extent of land which has ever
enjoyed one peaceable and civilized and lasting government. It was the
greatest experiment in Free Trade and Home Rule that the world has
yet beheld. I have limited myself in the preceding remarks to
ordinary matters which come in the way of ordinary students. I am well
aware that we can add to the Oxford ancient history course other and more
delightful vistas down the by-ways of folk-lore and religion, of
anthropology and geology. We can trace in Herodotus, quite as plainly as
in the Oedipus Tyrannus, that sub- stratum of savagery which underlies
all ancient and most modern life, and which lay closer to the
Greek, despite his intellectual refinement, than to the less humane
but more disciplined Roman. We can plunge into the labyrinths of 'Middle
Minoan' and classify 'protos' from all the coasts of the Aegean and
the Levant. We can trace from geological ages the growth of the
continents and seas and climates which made up the background of the
older Europe. These things are full of interest, and for some minds they
are both a relaxa- tion and a stimulus. They are not, I fear, so well
suited to all of us. There is, indeed, enough in the nearer fields
of ancient history for any student to fill his time with the more obvious
subjects of politics and geography and economics and archaeology. He may
even, if he wishes, find in his prescribed books an opportunity of
beginning to prepare himself for research. He cannot, indeed, as in
the Modern History School, offer as part of his degree examination a
dissertation on a subject chosen by him- self, and I am not quite clear
that, if he did, his thesis would be worth very much. But his study of
original authorities may teach him not only how to weigh the
statements of men for practical purposes, but also to note how history is
built up out of such statements. He can even carry his examination of
original authorities far enough to approach the region of independent
work, and to go through some of the processes which are connected
with the august name of the Seminar. But, let me add, this
historical course which gives the man who wishes it a glimpse of what
research work means, is not, and cannot be, a full preparation for
it. For that a further training is indispensable, whether it be in
archaeology or in any other subject, and that training cannot be included
in the ordinary curriculum, since it is only a tiny fraction of the whole
body of students which intends to, and is fit to, pass on to
research. The ordinary course lays the foundation of general knowledge,
without which it is useless to attempt any advanced study. The advanced
work prepares a few competent men for original and inde- pendent
research, and the function of the Seminar in Oxford would seem to be to
train such men, if they will stay here, after they have finished the
ordinary course. I had once a pupil, an American, who wished to
work for a ' research degree ' by offering a disserta- tion on a subject
in Roman History. He asked to be allowed to attend two courses of my
lectures, one a general sketch of the early Empire, the other a
some- what more advanced treatment of Roman inscriptions. After a
while, he asked if- he might drop the latter course ; he had, he said,
already heard a good deal of it in his own American University. When I
replied that in that case he had better drop the elementary course
also, he told me that this was mostly new to him. It appeared, on
inquiry, that his teachers had given him no training in general Roman
History ; they had taken him through a series of important
inscriptions, had explained to him the persons and things which
happened to be mentioned therein, and had said nothing of other persons
and things which chanced not to be mentioned. This is, of course, not a
fair specimen of University education in America. It is,
unfortunately, a rather good example of the mistakes often made by
those who are too eager to encourage advanced study. I am told that
I ought to conclude such a lecture as this by practical hints on the way
in which men should 1 read their books '. The one hint I care to give is
to attend to the matter and not only to the manner. There are many
devices which will help in this. It is, for instance, an aid to some
students to read their ancient texts twice, in two different languages,
first in the originals and then in some translation, in English
or French or German, using these translations not as ' cribs ' but
as continuous and (in a sense) independent narratives. But different men
work by different methods, and it is not always easy to give sound
general advice. An individual teacher may aid indi- vidual men by advice
suited to them personally, and his personality may inspire whole classes.
But general advice, a panacea for every learner, is a rather dan-
gerous thing. It is not, indeed, always much use to give it. I remember a
friend of mine who once attended such a lecture as this. When I asked him
what prac- tical good he had got out of it, he told me that the
lecturer advised his hearers to buy pencils with blue chalk at one end
and red chalk at the other and to mark their Herodotus in polychrome. He
bought the pencil : the day after his examinations were over, he found the
pencil still uncut. Nome compiuto: Remo Cantoni. Keywords: Romolo e
Remo; ovvero, il mito e la storia, Carlo Cantoni, filosofo, Remo Cantoni
filosofo, mito e storia, implicatura mitica, la morte di Remo, prejudices and
predilections, umano, preludio a un’antropologia, umano, umanismo, literae Humaniores – literæ Humaniores – Lit.
Hum. il primitivo. Il mito di Remo. Refs.:
Luigi Speranza, pel Gruppo di Gioco di H. P. Grice, “Grice e Cantoni.” The
Swimming-Pool Library, Villa Speranza, Liguria, Italia.


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