Idealism and Actualization. Saint-Just in Theory, Practice, and Exigency

Louis-Antoine Léon de Saint-Just (1767-1794) was a revolutionary, a statesman, and a political philosopher, yet it is largely only as a revolutionary that he is remembered. As a political person who occupied these three different but overlapping roles, Saint-Just is ideal as the subject and center o...

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Main Author: Schamel, Craig R
Format: Others
Published: Scholarship @ Claremont 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgu_etd/82
http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1084&context=cgu_etd
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spelling ndltd-CLAREMONT-oai-scholarship.claremont.edu-cgu_etd-10842014-07-12T03:34:44Z Idealism and Actualization. Saint-Just in Theory, Practice, and Exigency Schamel, Craig R Louis-Antoine Léon de Saint-Just (1767-1794) was a revolutionary, a statesman, and a political philosopher, yet it is largely only as a revolutionary that he is remembered. As a political person who occupied these three different but overlapping roles, Saint-Just is ideal as the subject and center of a study of actualization, the taking of political ideals into reality. Saint-Just’s political philosophy was that of an idealist, and yet he, by force of circumstance, ability, and audacity, had the opportunity in his short life to attempt to establish and put into practice his political ideals. In his work as a political person Saint-Just created templates for the understanding of the relationship between political theory and political action. Saint-Just’s political theory is examined in relation to his political action, using the concepts of ‘the natural’, ‘the civil’, ‘the social’ and ‘the political’, concepts which are central in Saint-Just’s political philosophy. Saint-Just’s formulations of these concepts, concepts which have also been central to the history of political philosophy, and his understanding of the relations between these concepts, helps to establish him as a political philosopher of some importance, as does the theory and practice approach to politics which his attempts demanded and which his political life demonstrated. In Saint-Just’s function as political philosopher the thesis finds the theoretical element of politics, which becomes redefined in its interaction with Saint-Just’s other functions as statesman and revolutionary, the latter two of which correspond roughly to practice and exigency. As a theorist who is also a statesman in a context of exigency, or revolution, Saint-Just’s political life is a constantly rearranged juxtaposition of theory, practice, and revolution, albeit one which never loses it essential ties to its philosophical base, even in the hours of greatest emergency. Such dedication to a philosophical base, one which refuses to dispense with political philosophy, demonstrates a new conception of political philosophy for the modern world, fills in elements of a theory of revolution as a phenomenon of both theory and action, and provides a contained case for examination of political philosophy and political action, questioning their disunity. 2012-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgu_etd/82 http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1084&context=cgu_etd © 2013 Craig R. Schamel CGU Theses & Dissertations Scholarship @ Claremont Saint-Just French Revolution Revolution Political Philosophy Philosophy Committee of Public Safety Political Theory
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Saint-Just
French Revolution
Revolution
Political Philosophy
Philosophy
Committee of Public Safety
Political Theory
spellingShingle Saint-Just
French Revolution
Revolution
Political Philosophy
Philosophy
Committee of Public Safety
Political Theory
Schamel, Craig R
Idealism and Actualization. Saint-Just in Theory, Practice, and Exigency
description Louis-Antoine Léon de Saint-Just (1767-1794) was a revolutionary, a statesman, and a political philosopher, yet it is largely only as a revolutionary that he is remembered. As a political person who occupied these three different but overlapping roles, Saint-Just is ideal as the subject and center of a study of actualization, the taking of political ideals into reality. Saint-Just’s political philosophy was that of an idealist, and yet he, by force of circumstance, ability, and audacity, had the opportunity in his short life to attempt to establish and put into practice his political ideals. In his work as a political person Saint-Just created templates for the understanding of the relationship between political theory and political action. Saint-Just’s political theory is examined in relation to his political action, using the concepts of ‘the natural’, ‘the civil’, ‘the social’ and ‘the political’, concepts which are central in Saint-Just’s political philosophy. Saint-Just’s formulations of these concepts, concepts which have also been central to the history of political philosophy, and his understanding of the relations between these concepts, helps to establish him as a political philosopher of some importance, as does the theory and practice approach to politics which his attempts demanded and which his political life demonstrated. In Saint-Just’s function as political philosopher the thesis finds the theoretical element of politics, which becomes redefined in its interaction with Saint-Just’s other functions as statesman and revolutionary, the latter two of which correspond roughly to practice and exigency. As a theorist who is also a statesman in a context of exigency, or revolution, Saint-Just’s political life is a constantly rearranged juxtaposition of theory, practice, and revolution, albeit one which never loses it essential ties to its philosophical base, even in the hours of greatest emergency. Such dedication to a philosophical base, one which refuses to dispense with political philosophy, demonstrates a new conception of political philosophy for the modern world, fills in elements of a theory of revolution as a phenomenon of both theory and action, and provides a contained case for examination of political philosophy and political action, questioning their disunity.
author Schamel, Craig R
author_facet Schamel, Craig R
author_sort Schamel, Craig R
title Idealism and Actualization. Saint-Just in Theory, Practice, and Exigency
title_short Idealism and Actualization. Saint-Just in Theory, Practice, and Exigency
title_full Idealism and Actualization. Saint-Just in Theory, Practice, and Exigency
title_fullStr Idealism and Actualization. Saint-Just in Theory, Practice, and Exigency
title_full_unstemmed Idealism and Actualization. Saint-Just in Theory, Practice, and Exigency
title_sort idealism and actualization. saint-just in theory, practice, and exigency
publisher Scholarship @ Claremont
publishDate 2012
url http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgu_etd/82
http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1084&context=cgu_etd
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