帝国,民族主义和基督教

P. Blond
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摘要

本文将帝国的历史与共体的发展并驾齐驱。它以埃里克·沃格林(Eric Voegelin)的著作为基础,沃格林认为,在历史上,普遍性是随着帝国的普遍化而发展的。我们发现这一基本论点非常可信,因为正是帝国迫使我们发展认知方法,在随后的任何社会结构中既包括被殖民者,也包括殖民者。因此,本文认为帝国是人类历史的同义词,即使是那些因逃避这种逻辑而受到赞美的实体(如希腊城邦),其帝国性也不亚于它们所反对的帝国。然后,论文认为,共同性的发展不是帝国的副产品,而是它首先推动了帝国的扩张。它试图证明,思维是人类历史、社会结构和行为中的偶然因素。它与弗朗西斯·福山(Francis Fukuyama)等思想家的观点相反,认为文明的质量差异没有生物学基础,而是认为文明的起源在于人类的概念性,而不是人类生物学、地域或任何其他影响生命的物质力量。在这样的背景下,论文得出结论,主要的政治问题在于将善与帝国的问题结合起来——这是基督教在人类历史上最先进的过程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Empire, nationalism and christianity
This paper studies in parallel the history of empire and the development of universals. It uses as its preliminary orientation the work of Eric Voegelin who argued that universals develop in history alongside and through universalising empires. We find this basic contention highly credible as it is empires that force us to develop cognitive approaches that encompass both colonised and coloniser in any subsequent social structure. So conceived, the paper then argues that empires are synonymous with human history as such and that even those entities (such a Greek city states) which are eulogised for escaping this logic are on examination no less imperial than the empires they oppose. The paper then argues that the development of universals is not a byproduct of empire but rather that it drives imperial expansion in the first place. It seeks to argue that ideation is the casual factor in human history, social structures and behaviour. It argues contra thinkers like Francis Fukuyama, there is no biological foundation for the qualitative distinctions of civilisation, rather the paper contends that the origin of civilisation lies in human conceptuality not human biology, locality or indeed any other material force impinging on life. So configured, the paper then concludes that the primary political question lies in bringing together the question of the good with empire – a process most advanced in human history by Christianity.
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