HARRINGTONIAN VIRTUE:
HARRINGTON, MACHIAVELLI, AND
THE METHOD OF THE MOMENT
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Published:1998-12
Issue:4
Volume:41
Page:987-1009
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ISSN:0018-246X
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Container-title:The Historical Journal
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hist. J.
Abstract
This article presents a reinterpretation of James Harrington's
writings. It takes issue
with J. G. A. Pocock's reading, which treats him as importing into
England a Machiavellian
‘language of political thought’. This reading is the basis
of Pocock's stress on the republicanism of
eighteenth-century opposition values. Harrington's writings were in
fact a most implausible channel
for such ideas. His outlook owed much to Stoicism. Unlike the Florentine,
he admired the
contemplative life; was sympathetic to commerce; and was relaxed about
the threat of ‘corruption’ (a
concept that he did not understand). These views can be associated with
his apparent aims: the
preservation of a national church with a salaried but politically impotent
clergy; and the restoration
of the royalist gentry to a leading role in English politics. Pocock's
hypothesis is shown to be
conditioned by his method; its weaknesses reflect some difficulties inherent
in the notion of ‘languages
of thought’.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
70 articles.
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