Feliks Koneczny

Feliks Karol Koneczny Polish pronunciation: [ˈfɛliks ˈkarɔl kɔˈnɛtʂnɨ] (November 1, 1862, Kraków – February 10, 1949, Kraków) was a Polish historian and social philosopher. Founder of the original system of the comparative science of civilizations.

Biography

Koneczny graduated from the Faculty of Philosophy (Sic!) at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków and began work at the Jagiellonian Library. After Poland regained its independence, he became an assistant professor in 1919. In June 1920, after he had qualified and received the degree of doctor habilitatus, he became a professor at Stefan Batory University in Wilno. After retiring in 1929, he moved back to Kraków.[1]

Works

His interests ranged from purely historical research to the philosophy of history, religion and philosophy.[1] His pioneering works deal with the history of Russia. Koneczny authored extensive monographs of Byzantine and Jewish civilizations, which he considered to be less developed than the Latin civilization of Catholic western Europe. In 1948, after sixty years of research work Koneczny calculated that his written scholarly output encompassed 26 volumes, each of them being 300 to 400 pages long, not to mention more than 300 articles, brochures and reprints.[1] His theory of civilizations might have inspired Anton Hilckman, Samuel P. Huntington and others.[1]

Types of civilizations, according to Koneczny

Feliks Koneczny divided civilizations into about twenty types, of which seven types still exist. Four are ancient: "Brahmin," "Jewish," "Chinese," and "Turanian". Three are medieval: "Latin," "Byzantine," and "Arab." The differences between civilizations are based on their attitude to law and ethics.

For example, Koneczny claimed that in Latin civilization, ethics is the source of law. If some laws are not ethical, then they are changed. Church is autonomous, independent and separated from the state. Individuality, self-rule and decentralization are highly valued. Government is judged on the basis of adherence to ethics. The law is of dual nature, divided into public and private spheres.

In Byzantine civilization, church is dependent on the state. In that type of civilization, in politics all means are justified to achieve the goal. Politicians follow ethics in private life, but in public they are judged by their skills, not by ethics. The legal government has absolute authority and its orders are not doubted. Germany under Bismarck was an example of that type of civilization.

In Turanian civilization, the government is the source of law and ethics and stand above the law and ethics. The ruler cannot be doubted. Koneczny considered Russia under Tsars as an example of this type of civilization.

Jewish civilization considers the law as the most important. The law is the source of ethics. The law cannot be changed. However, the same law can be differently interpreted, which leads to relativism of ethics. According to Koneczny, one of the elements of Jewish civilization is a belief in the superior role of one nation or race. Communist states are also products of Jewish civilization. Similarly to Brahmin then Hindu, it is a sacral civilization.

Koneczny claimed that civilizations cannot mix, and syntax of several civilizations leads to the victory of one of them, lower moral standards, or to a state of "un-civilization."

Koneczny did not tie civilization type to any particular race or nation. Hence, Poles could represent Turanian type of civilization (as, according to Koneczny, did Pilsudski's Poland) and Germans could represent the Jewish type. Shockingly, in his publication Hitleryzm zażydzony ('The Judaized Hitlerism') Koneczny claimed that Adolf Hitler was an example of Jewish civilization type.[2] On the other hand, an ethnic Jew could represent Latin type of civilization.

Koneczny considered racism as something alien to Latin civilization, which he considered the highest type.

According to Koneczny, Europe in his time was a battlefield between three types of civilization: Latin, Turan and Jewish. He argued that Byzantine type of civilization had already lost the battle and was in deep crisis.

Works

Most in Polish; one book available in English translation.

English Translation: Web page, Word (1.2MB)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Biliński P..Feliks Karol Koneczny - academic career path (alternate link), Kwart Hist Nauki Tech. 2005;50(1):95-115. Last accessed on 26 April 2007.
  2. Joanna Beata Michlic, Poland's Threatening Other: The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present, U of Nebraska Press, 2006, ISBN 0-8032-3240-3 Google Print, p.179

External links

Further reading