The Leviathan in the state theory of Thomas Hobbes : meaning and failure of a political symbol

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The Leviathan in the state theory of Thomas Hobbes : meaning and failure of a political symbol

Carl Schmitt ; foreword and introduction by George Schwab ; translated by George Schwab and Erna Hilfstein

(Contributions in political science, no. 374)(Global perspectives in history and politics)

Greenwood Press, 1996

Other Title

Leviathan in der Staatslehre des Thomas Hobbes

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Carl Schmitt, the Thomas Hobbes of the 20th century, joined the Nazi party in 1933 and aspired to become the crown jurist and political philosopher of the Third Reich. But, because of his anti-Nazi past, friendships with Jews and Marxists, and contempt for biological racism, Schmitt was severely attacked by the SS in 1936 and warned to stop posing as a National Socialist thinker. Fearful of what this might imply in the rapidly evolving one-party SS state, Schmitt began to distance himself from his National Socialist adventure—even tempered his recently acquired anti-Semitism—and carefully started to reconnect himself in 1937 and 1938 to the pre-1933 Schmitt. Writing in 1938 under the pretext of studying the significance of the symbol of the leviathan in Hobbes's theory of state, Schmitt alluded to the demise of the Third Reich because of its rapid transformation into a totalitarian polity. As Schmitt recognized, in this state, the Hobbesian protection-obedience axiom was being heavily tilted in favor of obedience at the expense of protection. When this occurred, Schmitt observed, the soul of a people…betakes itself on the 'secret road' that leads inward. Then grows the counterforce of silence and stillness, and Public power and force may be ever so completely and emphatically recognized and ever so loyally respected, but only as a public and only an external power, it is hollow and already dead from within. Schmitt survived the fall of the Third Reich, and in the postwar years came to be recognized as one of the most significant political philosophers of the century. This is the first translation available of this important work which will be of great value to scholars and students of modern political philosophy, legal theory, and the history of Weimar and Nazi Germany.

Table of Contents

Foreword Introduction Translator's Note Author's Introduction Origin of the Leviathan The Leviathan in Hobbes's Work Leviathan as "mortal god" and Representative The Command Mechanism The Separation of Inner from Outer Weakness of the Constitutional State Machine The Symbol Fails Appendix: The State as Mechanism in Hobbes and Descartes Index

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