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ECONOMIC DETERMINISM
It is a time-honored fashion of the historian to
ascribe the down-fall of Rome to its “dissolute
women.” This is, of course, a departure from the
“economic interpretation” of history. And when
the economic causes of the decay of that ancient gov
ernment are so glaringly apparent to even the most
casual student, it is only by extreme perversity that
the historian can close his eyes upon them, and go
so far out of the way as to hold the alleged im
morality of the women responsible. This, however,
has been done even recently, by writers who are
ordinarily keen at making the “economic interpreta
tion.” It seems hard, indeed, to get away from the
old, old habit of saying, “the woman did it.”
Rome being in this enfeebled condition, and its
powerful citizen-princes being no longer engaged
in foreign wars, they turned their arms against each
other; and the country was ravaged and plundered
by their depredations, until there was no longer any
security for either life or property. The highways
became so insecure, and travel so dangerous that
commerce became well-nigh impossible; and in
dustry suffered in like proportion. The owners of
slaves, having now no employment for them and
no means of feeding them, freedom became easy to
secure or was willingly bestowed as a gift.
The Greek philosophers had started with the
theory that human nature was perfect,—that if a
man followed all the impulses of his being he would
lead a perfect moral life. One wonders that such