Friday, March 13, 2026

Revolutionary Temptations


Edmund Burke’s encounter with the French Revolution left him with a conviction that has lost none of its urgency: that civilization is a fragile inheritance, not a blank slate upon which the zealot may inscribe his fantasies. The Revolution revealed to him, with a clarity bordering on terror, how swiftly the accumulated wisdom of generations can be swept aside when ideological intoxication takes hold. It taught him that society is not a machine to be redesigned at will, but a living organism whose health depends on continuity, restraint, and reverence for what has been handed down. Yet the melancholy truth is that humanity has rarely heeded this lesson. The revolutionary impulse, far from being chastened by the horrors of 1789, has reappeared in ever-new disguises, each time promising emancipation and each time delivering a familiar harvest of coercion, persecution, and ruin. 

Burke saw in the French Revolution not only a political upheaval but also a metaphysical rebellion: the attempt to erase the past and rebuild society according to abstract principles. This tabula rasa mentality, he argued, was a form of hubris that could only end in tyranny. For when the revolutionaries discovered that human beings stubbornly refused to conform to their rational schemes, they resorted to force. The guillotine became the instrument by which the new world was to be purified. Robespierre’s reign of terror was not an aberration but the logical consequence of a worldview that prized ideological purity above human life.

One might have expected such a catastrophe to inoculate future generations against the revolutionary virus. Yet the opposite occurred. The French Revolution became a template, a mythic drama of liberation that subsequent movements sought to emulate. The intoxicating promise of beginning the world anew proved irresistible to those who found the slow, imperfect work of reform intolerably dull. And so the nineteenth and twentieth centuries witnessed a procession of revolutions, each claiming to correct the failures of its predecessors, each repeating the same tragic pattern.

The October Revolution of 1917 stands as the most devastating example of humanity’s refusal to learn from history. The Bolsheviks, intoxicated by Marxist prophecy, believed themselves to be midwives of a new humanity. In their eyes, the old world was not only flawed but also irredeemably corrupt; it had to be annihilated. The result was a system of repression so vast and so methodical that it nearly extinguished the cultural and moral foundations of Western civilization. The Cheka, later the NKVD, institutionalized terror on a scale that dwarfed even the Jacobins. Millions perished in purges, famines, and labor camps, all in the name of a radiant future that never arrived.

Yet even after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the exposure of its crimes, the revolutionary impulse did not die. Almost forty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, one might have expected the utopian dream to have lost its allure. Instead, revolutionary socialism has found new life, particularly in the intellectual and cultural institutions of the West. The very societies that once stood firm against totalitarianism now harbor within their universities and activist movements a renewed appetite for ideological purification.

The contemporary revolutionary does not always wear the garb of the barricade fighter. Many operate within the academy, where they cultivate a worldview that regards Western civilization as a structure of oppression to be dismantled. They speak the language of justice, but their methods betray a profound hostility to freedom of thought. Dissent is pathologized; disagreement is treated as moral failure. The university, once a sanctuary for open inquiry, becomes instead a training ground for ideological conformity.

Alongside these intellectual revolutionaries stand their more visceral counterparts: the street activists who seize upon any pretext for disorder (i.e., vandalism and violence, the envious-chaotic destruction of all that is natural, beautiful, and free). Their rage is not directed towards specific injustices but towards the very existence of an inherited social order. They are the spiritual descendants of the Cheka, the SA, the SS—organizations that drew their strength from individuals who found in violence a release from personal frustration and a sense of belonging. These are people who, in Burke’s terms, have lost the “moral imagination,” the capacity to see others as fellow participants in a shared civilization. What remains is a hatred of life itself, a desire to tear down what they cannot understand or appreciate.

It is disheartening to observe how many young people, seemingly untouched by historical memory, fall prey to the allure of revolutionary utopianism. Their indignation is genuine, but their understanding is shallow. They believe that justice can be achieved instantly, that the imperfections of the world are the result of malice rather than the inevitable limitations of human nature. They imagine that by destroying existing institutions they can conjure a better world into being. In their childish defiance, they fail to grasp that every attempt to impose utopia has produced only new forms of oppression.

Burke warned that society is a partnership not only among the living but also with the dead and the unborn. To sever that partnership is to plunge into moral and political darkness. Yet the revolutionary mind, impatient with the slow accretion of custom and tradition, sees the past as an obstacle rather than a guide. It is this impatience—this refusal to accept the constraints of human nature—that fuels the recurring cycle of revolutionary fervor and subsequent disillusionment.

Humanity’s forgetfulness is not exclusively an intellectual failure; it is just as much a moral one. The lessons of the French Revolution were written in blood, yet they have been repeatedly ignored. The horrors of Bolshevism, too, have faded from collective memory, reduced to historical curiosities rather than warnings. And now, as new ideological movements gather strength, we find ourselves once again flirting with the same destructive impulses.

The tragedy is not simply that we forget, but that we choose to forget. The revolutionary promise is seductive precisely because it absolves individuals of responsibility. It offers a world in which suffering can be eliminated by structural transformation, in which human imperfection can be engineered away. It is easier to believe in such fantasies than to accept the burdens of freedom, which require patience, humility, and a willingness to work within the constraints of reality.

Burke’s reflections on the French Revolution should have become a permanent part of our political consciousness. His warnings about ideological fanaticism, his defense of gradual reform, his insistence on the moral significance of inherited institutions—all remain profoundly relevant. Yet his voice is increasingly absent from public discourse. In an age that prizes novelty over wisdom, his reverence for tradition is dismissed as reactionary. In a culture that celebrates disruption, his caution is seen as timidity.

However, Burke understood something that our age has forgotten: that civilization is not the product of revolutionary genius but of countless small acts of preservation. It is built not by those who seek to remake the world but by those who cherish what is already good and strive to improve what is flawed without destroying the whole.

The melancholy conclusion is that humanity has not learned from its encounters with revolution. The same historical patterns repeat because the same temptations endure. Ideological purity continues to seduce the young; resentment continues to animate the disaffected; intellectuals continue to mistake abstraction for wisdom. And so the cycle continues: utopian dreams give rise to coercive realities, and the price is paid in freedom, dignity, and human life. 

Burke’s insights remain available to us, but they are increasingly ignored. The question is not whether his warnings were correct—they have been vindicated repeatedly—but whether we possess the moral seriousness to heed them. At present, the signs are not encouraging. The revolutionary spirit, far from being extinguished, is once again gathering strength. And unless we recover the humility that Burke sought to instill, we may find ourselves repeating the tragedies of the past with a predictability that is as depressing as it is avoidable.