Abstract This paper examines George H. Sabine’s A History of Political Theory (1937), a landmark text that shaped mid-20th-century Anglophone scholarship. It analyzes Sabine’s methodological approach—historicism combined with a proto-behavioralist emphasis on social context—and evaluates his treatment of key figures from Plato to Marx. The paper argues that while Sabine’s progressive, empirically grounded narrative has been critiqued for its apparent relativism and neglect of normative philosophy, his work remains indispensable for understanding political theory as an evolving response to concrete historical problems.
George H. Sabine’s A History of Political Theory remains a monumental synthesis. Its historicist method, while contested, opened new avenues for understanding political ideas as embedded in human struggles. For students and scholars alike, engaging with Sabine means confronting the question: Do we study political theories as timeless truths, or as historical artifacts? Sabine’s answer—both, but with context first—continues to provoke and instruct. g.h. sabine a history of political theory pdf
First published in 1937, George Holland Sabine’s A History of Political Theory became the standard textbook in American and British universities for decades. Unlike purely exegetical accounts, Sabine (1880–1961) sought to present political ideas not as abstract, timeless doctrines but as “modes of solving political problems” rooted in specific social and economic conditions. This paper explores Sabine’s central thesis, his major interpretive choices, and the critical reception of his work. Abstract This paper examines George H