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Continental Political Philosophy What is continental political philosophy? continental philosophy? the concept will be treated ‘lightly’ in this course:

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Presentation on theme: "Continental Political Philosophy What is continental political philosophy? continental philosophy? the concept will be treated ‘lightly’ in this course:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Continental Political Philosophy What is continental political philosophy? continental philosophy? the concept will be treated ‘lightly’ in this course: - neither as a separate tradition or orientation, nor as anything exact (definable) at all - “that other philosophical discourse” (neg) discourses and themes not generally acknowledged and discussed within mainstream liberal political philosophy - for example: Rawlsian type theory of justice (pos) the legacies of Marx and Heidegger (among others), their impact and relevance for contemporary political philosophy - those political philosophical discourses that start off and have developed from out of the 20 th century French and German discourses - partly separately from the Anglo-American Today: Anglo-American and continental more and more intertwined, especially in political philosophy

2 What is continental political philosophy? phenomenology - Husserl, Heidegger - almost nothing of political philosophy as such (justice, equality, problem of political order, political institutions etc.) - implications for conceptions of the social (social ontology) hermeneutics - modern hermeneutics: Heidegger, Gadamer, Ricoeur - important implications for conceptions of the social (social ontology) - some political philosophical discourse, esp. Ricoeur (French) phenomenological existentialism - Merleau-Ponty, Sartre, de Beauvoir - existential phenomenology still not a political philosophy - deeply politically involved thinkers - Merleau-Ponty: separate writings on politics and political philosophy (not phenomenology?, instead the question of Marxism) - Sartre: committed writing, philosophical engagement in contemporary politically relevant issues - de Beauvoir: The Second Sex (1949), (not political philosophy?), other writings on politics Marx and Marxism - in France especially after the Second World War - existentialism and Marxism? - Merleau-Ponty continues to discuss Marxism, few references to phenomenology - especially Sartre: Critique of Dialectical Reason (1960)

3 What is continental political philosophy? phenomenology hermeneutics (French) phenomenological existentialism Marx and Marxism (German) critical social theory - Adorno, Horkheimer, Marcuse - social theory with a strong philosophical content - political philosophy as critique of society and of the present - no normative political philosophy in the classical sense Habermas - incorporation of philosophy, critical social theory and sociology - engages with more classical political philosophical themes - debate with Rawls, mid 1990:ies - political philosophy of deliberative democracy - Honneth, Forst Arendt

4 What is continental political philosophy? phenomenology hermeneutics (French) phenomenological existentialism Marx and Marxism (German) critical social theory from structuralism to post-structuralism Althusser: structural Marxism Derrida: deconstruction as critique of phenomenology - from sporadic engagement in ethics and political themes, to deep engagement (esp. 1990:ies onwards) => deconstruction and the political Foucault: power and a critical ontology of the present Nietzsche Deleuze&Guattari: “a prologue to anti-fascist thought” Lyotard: The Postmodern Condition (1979) - strongly and explicitly political themes, not much of classical political philosophy! - Lefort, Rancière, Badiou, Balibar - Butler - Laclau & Mouffe - Zizek - Hardt & Negri - a return to more classical political philosophical themes? Anglo-American critical theory: - Walzer, Young, Fraser, Benhabib Arendt

5 Some main areas of questions: ontology/social ontology - how to understand social and political reality - ontology of human being and of life in ‘society’ diagnosis of the times and social critique - a central theme of continental political philosophy - White: malignancy the problem of normativity - how to justify normative conceptions - common to all of political philosophy - often left vague and unclear in continental political philosophy the self-understanding of philosophical reflection - what can philosophy actually achieve and what should political philosophy do - critical reflection on this common in continental political philosophy => philosophical depth or ‘high-brow vagueness’? history and the question of possibilities - the problem of social transformation - often a central theme in continental political philosophy - importance of the Marxist tradition


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