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The Jewish Historian Flavius Josephus: A Biographical Investigation

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Certainly we are not all influenced in the same way by the same events; moreover,<br />

certain fundamentals are idiosyncratic to us by nature and they are also brought to bear under<br />

the most stupendous impressions of the outside world in such a way that they sometimes<br />

become fully evolved only by means of these effects. If it is correct, however, that a person is a<br />

product of his ancestry and his environment, then it follows necessarily that by means of an<br />

alteration of this environment the person becomes another, and all the more so indeed the<br />

more strongly the environment is altered. And since historical conception is contingent upon<br />

the subject who perceives, as is well known, so a historical conception must change as well<br />

along with a change in the feelings of a person, of course not in areas that are inwardly foreign<br />

and immaterial to us – nor does this bear upon historical issues at all here, rather upon<br />

antiquarian ones – but in cases where we indeed excite a historical impression within<br />

ourselves, where we philosophize historically. Voltaire, who had at first seen his ideal in Louis<br />

XIV, worked new biases into his second edition of Le siècle [234] de Louis XIV, not because new<br />

sources became available to him, but rather because he developed a more sceptical view of<br />

Louis XIV on account of his antireligious sentiments that had increased in the meantime.<br />

Whoever considers history to be not a collection of antiquaria[n details], but rather life and<br />

present [time], knows that history must be dependent upon the changing attitudes of its<br />

narrators. 83<br />

Although [scholars were] further removed from such ideas earlier, I certainly no longer<br />

fear any disagreement on this point today from researchers who are to be taken seriously; on<br />

the other hand philological criticism has raised the objection that it would not be possible to<br />

extract, from a single extant text, an inner development such as the one that I have [attained<br />

from my] reading of Polybius. I have replied to these objections in detail in an exhaustive<br />

treatment of Polybius’ tenth book, which appeared in Hermes, and I would like to refer to this<br />

essay herewith. Methodologically [speaking], however, it is of enormous<br />

satisfaction to me, in fact, that we have b een able to prove categorically the<br />

83<br />

I am speaking here only about serious characters, and not intending, for example, those<br />

completely unrelated monotonies of Burnet who changed his historical narrative from one<br />

edition to the next according to the constellation of the moment (Ranke, Analecten zur englishen<br />

Geschichte, page 291 ff.), or of Johannes von Müller, who skipped over the legend of Gessler’s<br />

hat in his first adaptation of Swiss history, but later included it in consideration for the public.<br />

Fueter, Geschichte der neueren Historiographie, page 406.<br />

205

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