

Revolution to Come: Dan Edelstein on Thinking About Revolution...and History
17 snips Jun 11, 2025
Join Dan Edelstein, a Stanford professor and author specializing in revolutionary thought, as he unravels the evolution of the concept of revolution from ancient skepticism to Enlightenment optimism. Edelstein illustrates how classical views feared the chaos of revolutions, contrasting sharply with later ideas that saw them as catalysts for progress. The conversation touches on pivotal moments like the French Revolution, the cyclical nature of political upheaval, and the lasting legacies of these transformative ideas on modern governance.
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Classical vs Enlightenment Revolution Views
- Classical thinkers like Greeks and Romans saw revolutions as destructive cycles with no positive end.
- Enlightenment thinkers flipped this view, seeing history as progress and revolution as its catalyst.
Polybius’ Cycle and Corruption Theory
- Polybius developed the theory of historical cycles linking constitution types in a circular fashion.
- He stressed internal corruption, not external threats, as the main cause of constitutional decline and revolution.
Christianity’s Embedding of Classical History
- Christianity embedded classical cyclical history within sacred linear history of beginning, middle, and end.
- This created a concept of a meaningless middle period waiting for Christ's second coming, lacking historical progress.