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Title: History of Political Ideas


1
History of Political Ideas
  • 3rd lecture
  • Ideas of Early Modern Age and Enlightenment

2
Political Thinking on Way to a Secular Society
  • The Church remained an important social power for
    centuries after the twilight of the Medieval
    Ages. However from the 14th Century AD the
    central, mundane, secular power of the king
    became ever stronger.
  • In the late medieval society, in the early,
    matured and late Renaissance, and in the early
    modern society (16-17th Century AD) the basic
    questions of political thinking became what
    makes the central political power legitimate
    (independently from the Church)? What (secular,
    non-ecclesiastic) goals must the monarch or the
    governor must strive after? What factors and
    institutes are necessary (if any) in order to
    control the central power and defend the people
    from a possible tyrant?
  • These thinkers raised the question of source and
    nature of political power in a secular manner.

3
Late Medieval Political Theory. Marsilius da Padua
  • An important predecessor of modern political
    thinking was Marsilius da Padua (1290-1343) of
    Italy. He wrote an important book Defensor
    Pacem, The Protector of the Peace. We could
    treat him as a forerunner of modern political
    thought, because the secular motifs were emphatic
    in his book.
  • According to Marsilius citizens are living in a
    political society not due to their nature but due
    to the recognition of the benefits of living
    together in a state. Creating a state is not a
    natural event but a voluntary act of a community.
  • It is the community who creates the laws and
    rules of the particular society. What makes a
    political order and a system of law legitimate?
    According to Marsilius if the will of the
    majority of society serves as the basis for a
    social and legal system, then the latter is
    legitimate. If it is not legitimated by the will
    of the majority of citizens, then this social
    order is illegitimate.
  • Only the will of majority could be the source of
    the legitimacy of political and social order.

4
Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527)
  • Father of modern political theory. First and
    foremost aim of governance of the society is
    success. He tried to articulate a realistic
    theory of political power in his book The
    Prince, (Il Principo). He said we must treat the
    norms and techniques of successful political
    action and strategy independent from the
    prescriptions of the moral. That who seeks
    moral, should rather remain inside private life.
    It is result what is important in business and
    political life .
  • He delineated a highly individualistic picture of
    society and social sphere. He praised the
    individualistic virtues and eminence of a person.
    Result and achievement what really matters in his
    opinion.
  • He did not say that Goal sanctifies the means
    a phrase which is often attributed to him, but he
    did say If you want a certain goal, then you
    must also want the means which lead to this
    goal.
  • He despised the Church and religion in general as
    a form of superstition and ignorance, and
    regarded religion as a mean to rule and
    manipulate people, who are less educated. His
    works were on the Index of forbidden literature
    of the Catholic Church for centuries.

5
What shall a prince do? Should he make himself
loved or rather feared?
  • What is the best strategy to rule and control a
    people? Should the people love the prince or
    should they rather fear him?
  • Machiavelli told if he could manage the both it
    would be the best, but if it is not possible to
    be loved and feared in the same time, it is
    better to be feared than to be loved. Because
    people are usually unreliable they offer their
    blood, honor and loyalty when there is no danger
    and need at all, and when the prince needs their
    loyalty in real, they betray him if they do not
    fear him enough.
  • If it is unavoidable to shed blood, the prince
    shall do better if he trust someone to take the
    role of the butcher, and to kill everyone who is
    actually or potentially a danger, or simply to
    set a bloody example. After the bloodshed the
    prince could throw this butcher or hangman to the
    anger of people, saying, that this man went too
    far, ignoring his personal orders.
  • The prince shall use the means of sword and
    intrigue, of bare (military, political) power
    and of deceive, of manipulating the people and
    his opponents.

6
The limits of using the power
  • What are the taboos, the borders of useing and
    abusing the political power? The prince must know
    that the citizens are the most sensible
    concerning their honour or reputation, and their
    private property. Accordingly the prince must
    respect the women and private property of the
    citizens under any condition. He could shed blood
    if it is necessary, but he cannot loot, otherwise
    he will be a subject of despise of the citizens.

7
Contract-theory
  • Early and matured Modern Age is a period of
    economic upswing. Consequently economic life
    influenced very deeply the intellectual life
    also. Thus the most popular theory of
    interpreting the source of political legitimacy
    was in the Modern Age the social contract theory
    of political power.
  • According to social contract theory the people,
    who are not yet citizens, give up some of their
    rights, in order to create a central political
    power with a monopoly of violence. The legitimacy
    of central political power rests on the implicit
    or explicit agreement of the citizens (who first
    became citizens as members of a state), on an
    explicit or implicit social contract between
    the members of society and between these members
    and the central power.

8
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679). Leviathan
  • According to Hobbes one could find two basic
    sorts of entities in the world natural and
    artificial. Amongst the artificial things the
    greatest and most important is the state. State
    is a huge machine that the people created to make
    their life easier, safer and happier.
  • Before creating the state, that is to say before
    political state the people lived in the natural
    state. In this natural state of life life was
    cruel, miserable, brutish and short. No one
    could feel himself or herself in safety, one
    could have been robbed or killed at any moment.

9
The Monarch in Hobbes
  • Therefore people recognized that their mutual
    interest is to create a central power, to which
    they cede some of their rights, and which in its
    turn defends the life and property of its
    citizens.
  • The utmost function of a state to defend the
    life and property of citizens. This state is
    according to Hobbes the Leviathan, the Great
    Monster, created by the people to their own
    defense. In Hobbes interpretation the head of
    Leviathan must be one single person. Otherwise
    the governance of the state would fell prey of
    meaningless debates
  • The Monarch, the governor of the Leviathan, has
    an absolute power by force of the social
    contract, and nobody has the right to question
    his decisions or to resist him.

10
John Locke (1632-1704). The problem with the
Absolute Sovereign
  • John Locke accepted Hobbes idea of the social
    contract theory of political legitimacy but he
    differed at the point whether the members of the
    society does not have any right to oppose the
    governor and to question his decisions.
  • He said that in Hobbes view it looks like as if
    people, because of troubles foxes and polecats
    causing them, happily surrender to a bloodthirsty
    lion. There must be a much more rational solution
    to the problem of natural state of man.

11
Locke. The Idea of Liberal State
  • According to Locke the ultimate source of
    property right is work or labor.
  • The power of the Sovereign or of central
    political institution is not unconditional it
    has a clause of resistance. According to this
    clause of resistance people should not obey to
    tyrannic power. They have the resist even with
    power, with weapons, in a military way, to a
    tyrannical central power.
  • The central power must serve the prosperity of
    the members of society, it must serve the goal to
    defend the life and property of people. The
    government is responsible to the people. It is
    the idea of the responsible state.
  • Absolute freedom of conscience, of science and of
    religion. With one exception according to Locke
    the atheist do not deserve to follow and
    propagate their ideas, because in the case of
    atheist there is no transcendent guarantee of
    their word so one cannot trust someone who
    declares himself/herself to be an atheist.

12
Enlightenment. The Age of Reason
  • We call Enlightenment (Aufklärung, Lumière) the
    intellectual and cultural movement in Europe in
    the 18th Century AD.
  • It was an age of advanced secularism, at least
    amongst intellectuals of the age.
  • Representatives of Enlightenment regarded the
    religion as superstition, something that hides
    the true nature of things from the eye of people,
    and something which is a mere mean of
    manipulation. Ignorance and manipulation most
    thinkers of Enlightenment described religion with
    these two word.
  • Crush the monstrous! said Voltaire, an
    intellectual leader of the age, where monstrous
    was the Church itself.
  • The thinkers of Enlightenment thought that the
    main source of troubles in the world is
    ignorance. If they spread the knowledge amongst
    the entire society, and if they unfold the laws
    of nature (and of society) as deeply as possible,
    then they will be able to solve all problems in
    the world, and they will be able to build a
    completely harmonious, happy society.

13
Montesquieu. The Spirit of Laws
  • According to Montesquieu (1698-1755) the source
    and basis of just governance is the division of
    powers. He elaborated this idea in his book The
    Spirit of Laws, (Lespirit des lois).
  • In Montesquieus opinion there are three basic
    governmental forms monarchic, republic and
    tyrannical. In monarchic one person owns and
    exerts power under the reign of laws, in the
    republic the entire people exerts power under the
    reign of laws again, while in a tyrannical system
    only one person owns the power, who does not care
    at all with the laws, nor the prosperity of
    people.
  • In his view a basic condition of a just
    governance is the division of power. There three
    main branches of political power juridical,
    executive and legislative power. When all three
    powers are centered in hand, and they are not
    functioning separately, then that system is at
    least potentially a tyrannical one because the
    utmost owner of power could charge and convict
    whomever he wants on trumped.-up charges.

14
Rousseau and the Social Contract
  • A leading figure of French Englightenment was
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778). He followed
    the idea of social contract, but he emphasized
    the thought that every power and sovereignty
    belong to the people itself. He emphasized the
    thought of Sovereignty of People.
  • His main work is Social Contract, (Contract
    Social, 1762). The man was born as a free being,
    notwithstanding he wears chains everywhere. Some
    thinks that they are masters of others, though
    they are slaves even more than the latter. How
    this change could have taken place? I dont know.
    What could do this rightful? This question, I
    suppose, I am able to answer.
  • The social contract is the source of every
    political right and legitimacy. The subject of
    social contract is the people itself. When the
    people feels that the basic aims of this contract
    are violated, then it has the right to revolt
    against the violation of the natural rights of
    its members.

15
The will of the all and general will
  • Rousseau rejected Montesquieus idea of division
    of powers. He thought that divising of the powers
    of people would be just the same of cuting into
    pieces a human body. The branches of political
    power must form a unified, organic body in his
    opinion.
  • Rousseau made a difference between the will of
    the all (volonté de tous) and the general will
    (volonté générale). The will of all is
    everybodys will, that is to say the will of
    every single person, the will of the individuals.
    This form of will could be wrong. The people,
    Rousseau thinks, often do not know what is their
    real interest and need.
  • In opposition to this the general will cannot be
    wrong, it intuitively knows always what are the
    true needs and interests of the people. The
    general will is represented by a central
    political institute of the society, which has the
    function represent the entire society.
  • In Rousseaus interpretation there is no fixed
    borders between private and public sphere in the
    ideal society of people sovereignty. The people
    live amongst glass walls. It is a collectivistic
    society.

16
David Hume. Custom is the great leader of life
  • Eminent representative of Scottish and Brittish
    Enlightenment. David Hume (1711-1776) was a
    founding father of modern conservative political
    theory alongside with the Irish Edmund Burke,
    who criticized harshly the French Revolution and
    Enlightenment.
  • According to Hume every working institution of
    present society passed the test of time, and thus
    deserves preservation and maintenance. We should
    be very careful when we want to alter the actual
    society, when we want to transform its
    institutions, because we cannot foresee how these
    changes will influence the entire society, and we
    should rather not make experiments with society.
  • The universal link and bondage between people is
    custom and habit. The people do not make any
    social contract or whatsoever but they are
    polished together. The custom helps the
    individual to find her/his way in the life, and
    custom holds together the society as a whole.

17
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804). What is
Enlightenment?
  • What is Enlightenment raised the question in
    his essay Kant, the leading figure of German
    Enlightenment, (Answer to the Question What is
    Enlightenment?, 1784).
  • Enlightenment, said Kant, is mans
  • Kant made a difference between the public and
    private usage of reason. He thought that in
    private sphere, when one fulfils his or her
    official obligations, when one does ones work,
    one must always follow the instructions of his
    superior or the official administrative norms and
    instructions of his vocation. Otherwise the life
    of a society cannot go on properly. So the
    private usage of private is limited.
  • But the public usage of reason cannot be limited
    in such a way, or the society cannot develop in a
    normal way. Everybody has the right to express
    his or her opinion, his or her critique
    concerning the matters and institutions of
    society.

18
The Perpetual Peace
  • In Kants view the history leads to a globalized
    community, where there are no wars anymore, and
    every local and global conflict is treated by one
    harmonized legal system. It is the world of the
    universal civil legal order. It is the world of
    Perpetual Peace, with an overal, completely
    rationally organized society, (or a global
    network of completely rational civil societies).

19
Hegel and the Civil Society as End of History
  • Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) was
    another important figure of German Enlightenment.
  • He rejected very emphatically the idea of social
    contract theory. He thought that it is an
    abstract approach of society. Society, Hegel
    said, is never a bunch of atomic individuals, but
    an organic whole with its own history.
  • Hegel followed the organicistic model of society
    which he took over (amongst others) from
    Aristotle, with whom he sympathized very much.
  • The source of political legitimacy is the
    traditions and customs of particular peoples.
  • The Civil Society with its rational laws means
    the end of history, in Hegels interpretation,
    but there will be no such a happy end of history
    about which Kant was talking. The nations will be
    separated forever (in Hegels view), and each
    develops that form of civil society which is
    characteristic to their own, internal, inherent
    nature.
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