“Nobody knows what is going to happen because so much depends on an enormous number of variables, on simple hazard. On the other hand if you look at history retrospectively, then, even though it was contingent, you can tell a story that makes sense…. Jewish history, for example, in fact had its ups and downs, its, enmities and its friendships, as every history of all people has. The notion that there is one unilinear history is of course false. But if you look at it after the experience of Auschwitz it looks as though all of history—or at least history since the Middle Ages — had no other aim than Auschwitz…. This, is the real problem of every philosophy of history how is it possible that in retrospect it always looks as though it couldn’t have happened otherwise?”
The New York Review of Books interview with the French writer Roger Errera (1978)
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Hannah Arendt 85
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Source: Foundations of Psychohistory (1982), Ch. 2, The Independence of Psychohistory, p. 85.

The New York Review of Books interview with the French writer Roger Errera (1978)
Eric Voegelin (1987), The New Science of Politics: An Introduction, ISBN 0226861147, p. 120