Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's Introduction
- ON THE LIMITS OF STATE ACTION
- NOTE ON THIS EDITION AND TRANSLATION
- Contents
- CHAPTER I Introduction
- CHAPTER II Of the individual man, and the highest ends of his existence
- CHAPTER III On the solicitude of the State for the positive welfare of the citizen
- CHAPTER IV Of the solicitude of the State for the negative welfare of the citizen—For his security
- CHAPTER V On the solicitude of the State for security against foreign enemies
- CHAPTER VI On the solicitude of the State for the mutual security of the citizens—Means for attaining this end—Institutions for reforming the mind and character of the citizen—National education
- CHAPTER VII Religion
- CHAPTER VIII Amelioration of morals
- CHAPTER IX The solicitude of the State for security more accurately and positively defined—Further development of the idea of security
- CHAPTER X On the solicitude of the State for security with respect to actions which directly relate to the agent only (Police laws)
- CHAPTER XI On the solicitude of the State for security with respect to such of the citizens' actions as relate directly to others (Civil laws)
- CHAPTER XII On the solicitude of the State for security as manifested in the juridical decision of disputes among the citizens
- CHAPTER XIII On the solicitude for security as manifested in the punishment of transgressions of the State's laws (criminal laws)
- CHAPTER XIV On the care of the State for the welfare of minors, lunatics, and idiots
- CHAPTER XV Measures for the maintenance of the State—Completion of the theory
- CHAPTER XVI Practical application of the theory proposed
- Other works by Wilhelm von Humboldt
- Select Bibliography
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN THE HISTORY AND THEORY OF POLITICS
CHAPTER V - On the solicitude of the State for security against foreign enemies
from ON THE LIMITS OF STATE ACTION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's Introduction
- ON THE LIMITS OF STATE ACTION
- NOTE ON THIS EDITION AND TRANSLATION
- Contents
- CHAPTER I Introduction
- CHAPTER II Of the individual man, and the highest ends of his existence
- CHAPTER III On the solicitude of the State for the positive welfare of the citizen
- CHAPTER IV Of the solicitude of the State for the negative welfare of the citizen—For his security
- CHAPTER V On the solicitude of the State for security against foreign enemies
- CHAPTER VI On the solicitude of the State for the mutual security of the citizens—Means for attaining this end—Institutions for reforming the mind and character of the citizen—National education
- CHAPTER VII Religion
- CHAPTER VIII Amelioration of morals
- CHAPTER IX The solicitude of the State for security more accurately and positively defined—Further development of the idea of security
- CHAPTER X On the solicitude of the State for security with respect to actions which directly relate to the agent only (Police laws)
- CHAPTER XI On the solicitude of the State for security with respect to such of the citizens' actions as relate directly to others (Civil laws)
- CHAPTER XII On the solicitude of the State for security as manifested in the juridical decision of disputes among the citizens
- CHAPTER XIII On the solicitude for security as manifested in the punishment of transgressions of the State's laws (criminal laws)
- CHAPTER XIV On the care of the State for the welfare of minors, lunatics, and idiots
- CHAPTER XV Measures for the maintenance of the State—Completion of the theory
- CHAPTER XVI Practical application of the theory proposed
- Other works by Wilhelm von Humboldt
- Select Bibliography
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN THE HISTORY AND THEORY OF POLITICS
Summary
If it were not useful in explaining our principal idea to apply it successively to individual cases, it would not be essential to the present inquiry, to make any reference to the subject of security against foreign enemies. But this digression is the less regrettable, so long as I confine my attention to the influence of war on national character, taking the point of view that I have chosen as the guiding principle of the whole inquiry.
Now, regarded in this light, war seems to be one of the most salutary phenomena for the culture of human nature; and it is not without regret that I see it disappearing more and more from the scene. It is the fearful extremity through which all that active courage—all that endurance and fortitude are steeled and tested, which afterwards achieve such varied results in the ordinary conduct of life, and which alone give it that strength and diversity, without which facility is weakness, and unity is inanity.
It may, perhaps, be argued that there are other means of achieving this—that there are many kinds of activity full of physical danger, and, if I may be allowed the expression, moral dangers also, which beset the firm, unfaltering statesman in the council room, and the free-spirited thinker in his solitary cell. But I cannot divest myself of the belief, that as everything spiritual is only a finer development of the physical, so it is in this case.
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- The Limits of State Action , pp. 45 - 48Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1969