Theories that travel well

For the ancient Greeks, "theory" was grounded in direct observation.

Words are the stories we use to tell other stories.

When news reports from Chile mention the "curfews" imposed to preserve public order there, for instance, they're using a word that goes back to the 19th century to refer to periodic restrictions on people's movements – orders to stay off the streets until noon, for instance.

But before curfew referred to a ban on movement, it had a rather different meaning. It was an order to "cover the fire" (from the French couvrir plus feu). In medieval Europe it was the practice to ring a bell in the evening in a town or village as an order to bank one's fire for the night – "to cover it with ashes and use other means to prevent it from burning too quickly and yet at the same time to prevent it from going out," according to the Winston Simplified Dictionary, published in 1919 and brought to my fingertips by the magic of Google.

Medieval Europeans worried about untended fires burning out of control. Better to have a loud reminder for everyone to tuck their fire in for the night before they got too sleepy than to let people just drift off in front of the hearth.

And so it is that contemporary emergency management practice (Chilean earthquake) borrows a term that evolved from a medieval form of what we might today call community policing.

Sometimes one is fortunate enough to discover the history of a whole field of knowledge in a single word.

Theory, Dear Reader, is an example of just such a word. So I found out the other day in conversation with a political scientist who specializes in the emerging field of comparative political theory.

And theory, she explained, is rooted in the ancient Greek concept of theoria, a practice of making an "embassy" – a trip, in those days, rather than a building – essentially a fact-finding mission, typically from one city-state to another, to find out how things were done in the other place. One would then return home and report to friends and neighbors on one's findings.

The Online Etymology Dictionary defines the Greek theoria as "a contemplation, speculation, a looking at, things looked at." The word is derived from thea, "a view" and horan, "to see." There's a connection with theater. One's travels and observations would provide the basis for one's "theories," in the modern sense – one's explanations of how things worked.

So theory, often derided as "abstract," turns out to be firmly grounded in direct observation. This is of interest to my political scientist friend because it suggests that comparison is built into the idea of "theory." And that, in turn, is important to her because she wants to defend the value of comparative political theory within a larger field often dismissed as "the study of dead European males."

These peripatetic Greeks were not, say, Margaret Mead sailing off to Samoa. Their "embassies" were not to the remotest corners of the globe.

But that's OK. Because one travels to find out – by comparison – more about oneself and one's own society, too. Some familiar lines from T.S. Eliot come to mind:

We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.

That, Dear Reader, is a theory I can endorse.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Theories that travel well
Read this article in
https://www.csmonitor.com/The-Culture/Verbal-Energy/2010/0323/Theories-that-travel-well
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
https://www.csmonitor.com/subscribe