Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
When and in what way does it make sense to think of philosophical and scientific activity or simply the act of thinking as acts of resistance to political corruption? This article examines Eric Voegelin's extended answer to that question. Voegelin gradually developed a conception of scientific inquiry that distinguished between science, philosophy, and the wider context within which these activities take place. He showed thereby that scientific inquiry may be a valuable form of political resistance, without its practitioners being fully aware philosophically of what they are doing
My thanks to Barry Cooper, Murray Jardine, Juergen Gebhardt, and three anonymous referees for their valuable comments on previous drafts of this article. An earlier version was delivered at the 1993 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association.
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6. To prevent a reification of the concept of order, we might add that an order is not an empirical object of study, but a discerned quality of the interrelationship of a set of objects. As such an intellectual abstraction, it is halfway between a concept and an immediate empirical object.
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11. Ibid., p. 2.
12. Cf. Voegelin, Eric, Science, Politics, and Gnosticism (Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1968), pp. 53–73.Google Scholar
13. Plato and Aristotle, pp. 2–3.
14. Ibid.
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29. Space limitations dictate that this foreshortened account cannot do justice either to philosophy or science and the conceptual problems both activities engender. I intend here merely to offer working characterizations of both activities limited to the purposes of this article.
30. Voegelin, Eric, Autobiographical Reflections, ed. Ellis Sandoz (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989), p. 12Google Scholar; cf. New Science, pp. 13–24.
31. Reflections, p. 12; New Science, pp. 23–26.
32. “Here is the gap in Weber's work constituting the great problem with which I have dealt during the fifty years since I got acquainted with his ideas” (Reflections, p. 12).
33. Here again, he attributed his strong inclination for intellectual honesty to the influence of Max Weber (Ibid., p. 45).
34. Ibid.
35. Ibid., p. 47. For an early example of Voegelin's contest with intellectual dishonesty, coupled with a quest for precision of language in an effort to resist disorder and ideological corruption, see his “The Theory of Legal Science: A Review,” Louisiana Law Review 4 (1942): esp. 558–71.Google Scholar Hunnngton Cairn's reply to Voegelin's review immediately follows. Particularly if it is considered in light of Voegelin's critique of Kelsen's pure theory of law, it distressingly illuminates thesorts of phenomena Voegelin was combatting.
36. Reflections, p. 50.
37. Ibid.
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45. Reflections, p. 21.
46. Ibid., pp. 21–22; Rassenidee, pp. 6–7. Voegelin never rejected Kelsen's theory of law per se, but only restricted its usefulness to a particular realm of law, denying its adequacy as a theory (or science) of politics. Cf. “Two Recent Contributions,” p. 90; and in his review of Kelsen, Hans, “General Theory of Law and State,” Louisiana Law Review 6 (1945): 491.Google Scholar As evidence for the development of Voegelin's own thought during this period, his critique in Rassenidee of Kelsen's theory should be compared with his laudatory and optimistic comments seven years earlier in his “Kelsen's Pure Theory of Law,” Political Science Quarterly 42 (1927): 268–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
47. Voegelin's concepts of “compactness” and “differentiation” were part of a larger theory of history. Voegelin had found in his historical investigations “epochal, differentiating events, the ‘leaps in being,' which engendered the consciousness of a Before and After and, in their respective societies, motivated the symbolisms of a historical ‘course' that was meaningfully structured by the event of the leap.” Accordingly, “the experiences of a new insight into the truth of existence, accompanied by the consciousness of the event as constituting an epoch in history, were real enough. There was really an advance in time from compact to differentiated experiences of reality, and, correspondingly, an advance from compact to differentiated symbolizations of the order of being ”(Voegelin, , Order and History, vol 4, The Ecumenic Age [Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1974], p. 2).Google Scholar Voegelin's own discoveries concerning his motivations for resistance and the activities of others in this regard was a minor, personal example of such an advance.
48. Reflections, p. 29.
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53. Anamnesis, p. 183.
54. Ibid.
55. Chesterton, G. K., Saint Thomas Aquinas: “The Dumb Ox” (Garden City, NY: Image Books, 1956), p. 141.Google Scholar
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58. Strauss, Leo, Natural Right and History (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1953), pp. 4–5.Google Scholar Cf. The Rebirth of Classical Political Rationalism, ed. Pangle, Thomas L. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,1989), pp. 8–12.Google Scholar