Princeton UP Ideas Podcast

Dan Edelstein, "The Revolution to Come: A History of an Idea from Thucydides to Lenin" (Princeton UP, 2025)

Dec 10, 2025
Dan Edelstein, William H. Bonsall Professor of French at Stanford, explores the complex idea of revolution from its ancient roots to modern implications. He discusses how classical thinkers viewed revolutions as chaotic and destructive, while Enlightenment thinkers saw them as catalysts for progress. Edelstein examines the conservative transformations of British revolutions and the challenges modern revolutions face, including the risk of authoritarianism. His insights prompt a reflection on the balance between stability and the hope for meaningful change.
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INSIGHT

Classical Fear Of Revolution

  • Classical thinkers saw revolution as catastrophic disruption, not progress.
  • They prized stable, well-balanced constitutions to prevent violent stasis and constitutional change.
ANECDOTE

Adams Quoting Thucydides

  • Dan found John Adams quoting Thucydides when defending the U.S. Constitution.
  • That moment revealed how classical fears of revolution shaped modern constitutional thought.
INSIGHT

Revolution Principles As Legal Cover

  • 'Revolution principles' referred to Glorious Revolution principles used to claim legitimacy.
  • John Adams invoked those principles to justify Massachusetts' resistance as continuity with 1688‑89.
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