The War on Concepts: The Thought of Jan Patočka and the War on Terror

Along with the notion of war in general, the so-called war on terror has been, since its inception in 2001, the subject of much debate and theorization. French thinker Gilles Andréani discusses the appropriateness of the term "war" to apply to the present conflict; Antonio Negri has argued...

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Main Author: Katy Scrogin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Santo Tomas 2008-06-01
Series:Kritike: An Online Journal of Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.kritike.org/journal/issue_3/scrogin_june2008.pdf
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spelling doaj-5114536f849344068ce904449c77a2f72020-11-24T23:26:31ZengUniversity of Santo TomasKritike: An Online Journal of Philosophy1908-73302008-06-01216878The War on Concepts: The Thought of Jan Patočka and the War on TerrorKaty ScroginAlong with the notion of war in general, the so-called war on terror has been, since its inception in 2001, the subject of much debate and theorization. French thinker Gilles Andréani discusses the appropriateness of the term "war" to apply to the present conflict; Antonio Negri has argued how the State's use of the concept of peace justifies its engagement in warfare in general. I approach the conversation, however, by presenting the thoughts of 20th century Czech philosopher Jan Patočka on the relationship between war and peace. Here, I utilize his views, formulated in the context of Soviet control of Eastern Europe, to deconstruct the Bush administration's declaration of war on a concept; in this case, terror. In what follows, I delineate the main aspects of Patočka's understanding of continuous warfare in the 20th century, after which I apply them to some of the central features of the Bush administration's war rhetoric. Additionally, I suggest that Patočka's notion of the solidarity of the shaken may provide a starting point from which all of those involved in the conflict may begin to move forward.http://www.kritike.org/journal/issue_3/scrogin_june2008.pdfJan Patočkaconceptswar on terror
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katy Scrogin
spellingShingle Katy Scrogin
The War on Concepts: The Thought of Jan Patočka and the War on Terror
Kritike: An Online Journal of Philosophy
Jan Patočka
concepts
war on terror
author_facet Katy Scrogin
author_sort Katy Scrogin
title The War on Concepts: The Thought of Jan Patočka and the War on Terror
title_short The War on Concepts: The Thought of Jan Patočka and the War on Terror
title_full The War on Concepts: The Thought of Jan Patočka and the War on Terror
title_fullStr The War on Concepts: The Thought of Jan Patočka and the War on Terror
title_full_unstemmed The War on Concepts: The Thought of Jan Patočka and the War on Terror
title_sort war on concepts: the thought of jan patočka and the war on terror
publisher University of Santo Tomas
series Kritike: An Online Journal of Philosophy
issn 1908-7330
publishDate 2008-06-01
description Along with the notion of war in general, the so-called war on terror has been, since its inception in 2001, the subject of much debate and theorization. French thinker Gilles Andréani discusses the appropriateness of the term "war" to apply to the present conflict; Antonio Negri has argued how the State's use of the concept of peace justifies its engagement in warfare in general. I approach the conversation, however, by presenting the thoughts of 20th century Czech philosopher Jan Patočka on the relationship between war and peace. Here, I utilize his views, formulated in the context of Soviet control of Eastern Europe, to deconstruct the Bush administration's declaration of war on a concept; in this case, terror. In what follows, I delineate the main aspects of Patočka's understanding of continuous warfare in the 20th century, after which I apply them to some of the central features of the Bush administration's war rhetoric. Additionally, I suggest that Patočka's notion of the solidarity of the shaken may provide a starting point from which all of those involved in the conflict may begin to move forward.
topic Jan Patočka
concepts
war on terror
url http://www.kritike.org/journal/issue_3/scrogin_june2008.pdf
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