The tradition comes to an end Mainstream conjectural and philosophical history, in the Scottish style, hardly survived as a living tradition into the 1790s. Works went out of print; younger authors such as
John Adams,
William Alexander and
John Logan failed to renew the ideas, with Alexander's
History of Women (1779) being criticised as shallow. Dugald Stewart's formulation of conjectural history was published in 1794, in his
Account of Adam Smith for the
Transactions of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh. The question has been raised as to Stewart's intention then in describing the tradition in that way, and
John Burrow has argued that he wished to dissociate Smith from political radicalism. Where stadial theory appeared in later authors, the original thrust was distorted. Hawthorne writes instead of the historical/sociological insights of the Scots being lost in the British context, despite the "tension between a 'natural' account of civil society and a developing sense of the factual importance and moral difficulties of individualism" having become apparent, to
utilitarianism and vaguer
evolutionism.
Religious opposition The
Encyclopædia Britannica, in its
second edition but particularly in its
third edition (1797), attacked the premises of conjectural history from a biblical angle. In the second edition
James Tytler opposed the polygenist approach of Kames. The third edition, under the editorship of
George Gleig, featured "Savage" as a new topic, and expanded articles "Society" and "Moral philosophy". Cross-referenced to theological and biblical topics, and to articles by
David Doig who had answered Kames with
Two Letters on the Savage State from 1775/6, these articles in particular argued the orthodox Christian case.
Robert Heron contributed to the article "Society", and took aim at the four stages theory, claiming polygenism followed from it (in contradiction to the Bible). Further, the assumption of a baseline state of savagery also seemed to Heron to be implicated with polygenism; and he with Doig attacked the assumption as echoing
Lucretius and
Democritus, and godless materialist
spontaneous generation of humankind, implicit in the whole idea of conjectural history. The articles on "Beauty" and "Love" were also changed to remove the influence of Kames, as part of the consistent assertion of
scriptural monogenism.
Relationship to antiquarianism Conjectural argument had a bad name in 18th century British
antiquarian circles. An austere and sceptical approach centred on facts, as adopted by
Richard Gough and
James Douglas, was favoured in the second half of the century. On the other hand, the interpretations of the stadial theory were quite welcome, and while popularised by the Scottish school, did not seem innovative in the sense of a break with Early Modern historiography, and concerns with natural law and
civic humanism. The urban history of
John Trussel was a precursor. The discussion of the breakdown of the
feudal system was a topic of considerable antiquarian interest. The stadial history was embraced by
Thomas Pownall. Early anthropology carried into the 19th century assumptions about the search for origins of civilisation, and unilineal evolution, as appropriate tools for investigating societies. It was widely assumed, further, that current "peoples" were a window into the past. These approaches were seen in
Lewis Henry Morgan. Eventually, in the 20th century, field work and
structural functionalism led to a rejection of the whole paradigm.
"Scottish orientalism" ==Notes==