PhD ThesisThis thesis sets out to examine the interplay between utopian theory and political practice through
close readings of three key texts in the early modern Western utopian tradition, Thomas More’s
foundational Utopia (1516), Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis (1626) and Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s
Travels (1726). It argues that early modern utopian literature offers two competing approaches to
the imagining of an ideal society: the practical-oriented approach initiated by Bacon, and the
moderate, sceptical approach inspired by Plato’s Republic and Ciceronian civil philosophy, which
is here represented by More and Swift. Modern utopias are widely understood as blueprints for
social reform by scholars such as Karl Popper (1945), Krishan Kumar (1987) and Ruth Levitas
(2009). This thesis argues, instead that this modern concept of utopia emerges when utopias adopt
the Baconian approach and break away from the classical heritage. More broadly, this thesis aims
to recover the value of the rich intellectual tradition of early modern utopian thinking; this
includes its sceptical engagement with the project of utopianism. We can only understand our
own desire for civic reform with a fuller understanding of this tradition.
In Chapter One, I argue that More’s Utopia is a cautionary tale against the passion for the
ideal society. The description of utopia is preceded by a dialogue on whether philosophers should
adapt to political reality or uphold their idea of justice without compromise. The dialogical form,
with its openness, encourages critical assessment of the zealous character Hythlodeaus who longs
for Utopia, and his position is further undermined when his monologue on the best
commonwealth becomes fraught with difficulties and contradictions. Chapter Two argues that
Bacon turns utopian literature into an applicable blueprint for political reform and his New
Atlantis thus marks a turning point for utopian literature. Concerned about the religious conflict
in his day, Bacon advocates a religiously tolerant and charitable utopia. For the first time, utopia
is conceived as a solution to a specific problem instead of the best commonwealth. In Chapter
Three, I argue that Gulliver’s Travels criticizes the Baconian approach for abandoning the topic of
the best commonwealth while simultaneously reappraising the Platonic ideal. Despite his
apparent endorsement of the classical tradition, Swift is in fact deeply sceptical of whether the
return to a Platonic approach is feasible when the understanding of man and society has been
radically reshaped by modern science
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