The word 'ideology' was coined by the French philosopher Antoine Destutt de Tracy in 1796, during the intellectual ferment of the French Revolution. He formed it from Greek 'idea' (ἰδέα, form, appearance, concept) and 'logos' (λόγος, study, discourse, reason), intending it as the name for a new and rigorous science — 'idéologie' — that would study the origin and nature of human ideas, much as biology studies living things or geology studies the earth.
De Tracy was a member of the 'Idéologues,' a group of Enlightenment philosophers who believed that by understanding how ideas form in the human mind, they could reform education, law, and governance on rational principles. Their project was optimistic and scientific in spirit: ideology was to be 'the science of ideas,' as neutral and systematic as any natural science.
This neutral meaning did not survive long. Napoleon Bonaparte, who initially supported the Idéologues, turned against them when their commitment to republican principles conflicted with his authoritarian ambitions. He began using 'idéologues' contemptuously to mean impractical intellectuals whose abstract theorizing was disconnected from political reality. By the time the word entered wide European usage, it carried this pejorative undertone: an ideology was not just a system of ideas but an impractical or dogmatic one.
Karl Marx deepened the negative connotation. In Marx's usage, 'ideology' meant a system of beliefs that reflects and serves the economic interests of a particular social class while presenting itself as universal truth. The 'German Ideology' (1846) argued that the ruling class's ideas are always the ruling ideas — that what appears as philosophy, religion, or common sense is actually a reflection of material power relations. This Marxist sense of ideology as 'false consciousness' — beliefs that mask their own origins in class interest — became influential across the social sciences.
The Greek root 'idea' (ἰδέα) derives from the verb 'idein' (to see), from PIE *weid- (to see, to know). In Plato's philosophy, the 'Ideas' or 'Forms' were the eternal, perfect patterns of which earthly things are imperfect copies — the most famous being the Idea of the Good. The English words 'idea,' 'ideal,' 'idealism,' and 'ideology' all descend from this root, each preserving a different aspect of the original concept.
Today, 'ideology' is used in both neutral and pejorative senses. Political scientists use it neutrally to describe any coherent system of political beliefs: liberalism, conservatism, socialism, and libertarianism are all 'ideologies' in this sense. In everyday speech, 'ideological' often implies rigidity or dogmatism — being 'too ideological' means letting abstract principles override practical judgment. Both senses coexist, and the word's meaning in any given context depends heavily on the speaker's intention.