About This Book
Two lectures examine what history can teach about human nature, political authority, and religion. Rejecting reductive biological explanations of origins, they stress humanity's distinctive inventiveness and capacity for ideals, and trace social development through successive stages that yield settled agriculture, property relations, law, and family institutions. One lecture focuses on the state and the role of ideas and legal order in progress; the other considers religion, arguing that unified belief counters arbitrary worship and helps harmonize moral and social forces. Overall, history is presented as evidence of intellectual and moral advancement shaped by ideals rather than mere antiquarian record.
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