When the Romans coined the phrase ‘Fortune favours the brave’, they expressed a powerful belief in people’s potential to exercise their will and shape their future. With the ascendancy of the Enlightenment and the commanding influence of science and knowledge, belief in humanity’s creative and transformative potential flourished. Today, such ideas have lost much of their authority. Though society relies on science and knowledge far more than in previous times, these are less celebrated and affirmed than in the nineteenth or twentieth centuries.
Contemporary society attaches little significance to its intellectual and cultural legacy. Some historians claim that the people of Europe have become psychically distanced from the past to such an extent that they no longer need history to cultivate their identity or to make sense of who they are. ‘Clearly Europeans have a sense of themselves as survivors of a history they have left far behind them; they do not see history as their origin or the foundation on which they stand,’ argued the historian Christian Meier. He added:
History is not something they desire to carry on (in a better way if possible). Hence they feel no gratitude to their forebears for what they achieved with so much labor; on the contrary, they are fixated on all the things they don’t understand (and are making an effort to understand), such as wars, injustice, discrimination against women, slavery, and the like. They feel uncoupled from their history, the seriousness of which they are, generally speaking, less and less able to imagine.9