Saturday, February 14, 2026
A Very Dangerous Set of Citizens
Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859), Democracy in America, Part II, Book I, Chapter XV (tr. Henry Reeve):
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If men were to persist in teaching nothing but the literature of the dead languages in a community where every one is habitually led to make vehement exertions to augment or to maintain his fortune, the result would be a very polished, but a very dangerous, set of citizens. For as their social and political condition would give them every day a sense of wants, which their education would never teach them to supply, they would perturb the state, in the name of the Greeks and Romans, instead of enriching it by their productive industry.
