書誌事項

Published essays

translated from the German by M.J. Hanak ; edited with an introduction by Thomas W. Heilke

(The collected works of Eric Voegelin / editorial board, Paul Caringella ... [et al.], v. 7-9)

University of Missouri Press, c2001-c2003

  • 1922-1928
  • 1929-1933
  • 1934-1939

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

v. 7: edited with an introduction by Thomas W. Heilke and John von Heyking

v. 8: translated from the German by M.J. Hanak and Jodi Cockerill ; edited with an introduction by Thomas W. Heilke and John von Heyking

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

1934-1939 ISBN 9780826213372

内容説明

In this collection of essays, which covers the years from 1934 to 1939, we see Eric Voegelin in the role of both scholar and public intellectual in Vienna until he was forced to flee the Nazi terror that descended on Austria in 1938. These essays encompass a broad spectrum of topics, ranging from Austrian politics, Austrian constitutional history, and European racism, to questions of the formation and expression of public opinion, theories of administrative law, and the role of political science in public university education. Several essays serve as useful commentaries on, elaborations of, or synopses of arguments Voegelin made in the four books he had published between 1928 and 1936. These essays will be of interest to a wide range of scholars, including constitutional historians, historians of political science, political theorists, and students of Voegelin's later work.

目次

  • Editor's Introduction
  • 1. A New Cameral System in the Mirror of History (1934)
  • 2. The Authoritarian State Core (1934)
  • 3. One More Time ""Race and State"" in Political Science: A Rebuttal (1934)
  • 4. The Race Idea and Science: A Clarification (1934)
  • 5. Danse Macabre 1934: A Retrospect on the Commemoration Day of the Dead (1934)
  • 6. Drafting a Constitution for Austria (1934)
  • 7. Race and State (1935)
  • 8. The Administrative Regime: Advantages and Disadvantages (1935)
  • 9. Josef Redlich (1936)
  • 10. Popular Education, Science, and Politics (1936)
  • 11. Changes in the Ideas of Government and Constitution in Austria since 1918 (1937)
  • 12. Flight into Work (1937)
  • 13. Expression of Opinion and Opinion Formation (1937)
  • 14. The New Style of Warfare (1937)
  • 15. Austria and the Studies Conference (1937)
  • 16. What May People Be Allowed to Know? (1937)
  • 17. On Sander's General Political Science (1939)
巻冊次

1922-1928 ISBN 9780826214423

内容説明

This volume of The Collected Works contains essays that were published by Voegelin from 1922 to 1928, the period immediately following his doctoral studies and including a two-year study trip to the United States. They trace his intellectual formation in the 1920s, which resulted in a critique of political science conceived of in exclusively legal terms, and a move toward one that examines the substratum of ideas and structures that provide the meaningful unit of a given political society. The topics of the essays range from the highly speculative - theories of state form, the science of Max Weber, the sociology of knowledge, Humean sociology, time and economy, and Kelsen's pure theory of law - to more pragmatic questions such as procedures for amending the American constitution, the workings of the U.S. Federal Reserve Board, class conflict in the United States, and a fascinating account of the deliberations by the French National Assembly that led to the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man. This volume is key in exemplifying the movements in Voegelin's career - from a student to a scholar in his own right.
巻冊次

1929-1933 ISBN 9780826214829

内容説明

This volume of The Collected Works contains essays published by Voegelin between 1929 and 1933, the period between the publication of his first book, On the Form of the American Mind, Hitler's rise to power, and Voegelin's two books analyzing the explosive race issues posed by National Socialism. The essays herein reflect the intellectual and political tumult of the period and their author's maturing understanding of political reality as he moved away from positivism and Kelsen's ""Pure Theory of Law"" toward a more refined and open philosophical stance. The heart of this shift is signaled by his emphasis on philosophical anthropology and his stress on the decisive importance of the moral substance basic to political communities. The topics of the essays are grouped around major themes in sociological theory, political science, and the theory of law. They illuminate the theoretical and practical impact of Voegelin's experiences in America as he increasingly engages European theories of state, especially the solidarism of leading French and German scholars. In content these essays range from pragmatic questions, including American theories of property, economic transactions, and due process of law to Austrian constitutional reforms. Voegelin explores the technically complex speculative matters surrounding sovereignty and law, Max Weber's science, and the spiritual form of Europe. He analyzes Kant's understanding of moral duty and the meaning of solidarity as the substance of democratic society. Through these discourses, readers are provided clues about how the theme of divine transcendence increasingly finds expression during this crucial early stage of Voegelin's scholarly life. Thus, these studies mark the early path Voegelin took in making his arduous journey from legal scholar to philosophical political scientist. They display his increasingly resolute devotion - against challenges both existential and urgently political - to a growing insight into what it means to be fully human as he gropes his way toward an eventual philosophy of politics and history sufficient to amplify that noble insight.

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