Strauss and Schmitt as readers of Hobbes and Spinoza: On the relation between political theology and liberalism

Miguel E. Vatter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Among those thinkers who experienced the emergence of totalitarian regimes and lived to offer a theoretical analysis of them, it is not infrequent to notice the absence of what in our times is presented as unquestionable evidence: the conviction that liberalism constitutes a political system antithetical to totalitarianism. Arendt and the early Frankfurt School, for instance, did not share this conviction. For them liberalism does not effectively counteract totalitarianism, and may even favor conditions that make it possible. The various phenomena that attest to this inversion of liberalism come under the name of "dialectic of Enlightenment." The recent work of Giorgio Agamben offers a provocative and increasingly influential recasting of this dialectic, a hypothesis as to how liberalism, understood as a system of rights based on the absolute respect of human dignity, may be internally connected to totalitarian phenomena. Agamben locates the connection in the very idea of the rule of law. Modern liberalism demands that individuals give to their conduct the form of law so as to allow for the mutual coexistence of their freedoms. Behind this demand, Agamben [End Page 161] identifies a biopolitical finality that seeks to bring human life under the control of the law in order to exercise unlimited mastery over it.

Significantly, Agamben relies heavily on Carl Schmitt's theory of sovereignty to deploy his hypothesis. Just as Schmitt argues that a legal order obtains only where someone has the power and authority to decide on what constitutes an exception to that order, so Agamben argues that life can be given the form of law only when the law is suspended, and a "state of exception" is introduced in which human life is "sacralized," that is, becomes a form of life that can be killed without committing either murder or sacrilege. For Agamben, the sacralization of human life names a process that makes use of the original intention behind liberalism, namely, the protection of the biological life of individuals from the threats of war and anarchy in order to arrive at the systematic production of "bare life" which can be killed with impunity in the totalitarian Lager.1 In Agamben, Schmitt's concept of sovereignty becomes the discursive topos where totalitarianism and liberalism reveal a troubling affinity.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)161-214
Number of pages54
JournalCR-THE NEW CENTENNIAL REVIEW
Volume4
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2004
Externally publishedYes

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