A Most Dangerous Science| Discipline and German Political Philosophy, 1600-1648

<p>This dissertation tracks the development of German political philosophy over the course of the first half of the seventeenth century, with an emphasis on the disciplinary, methodological, and pedagogical concerns of Politica writers. These figures produced large-scale technical textbooks on...

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Main Author: Staley, Maxwell Reed
Language:EN
Published: University of California, Berkeley 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10930815
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-109308152018-11-22T16:43:27Z A Most Dangerous Science| Discipline and German Political Philosophy, 1600-1648 Staley, Maxwell Reed European history <p>This dissertation tracks the development of German political philosophy over the course of the first half of the seventeenth century, with an emphasis on the disciplinary, methodological, and pedagogical concerns of Politica writers. These figures produced large-scale technical textbooks on politics, which attempted to make sense of the chaotic civil sphere through the application of disciplinary structures. The main influences on their thought came from the sixteenth century: Aristotelianism, reason of state, natural law, and neostoicism were the competing traditions that they attempted to fit into comprehensive treatments of their subject. Generally, these thinkers have been organized by historians into schools divided by their political and confessional commitments. I argue that, while these factors were important, their disciplinary and methodological choices also decisively shaped their vision of politics, and indeed their positions on the critical questions of their day. I do this by focusing on four specific writers, one from each of the four faculties of the early modern university: Bartholomaus Keckermann from the arts faculty, Henning Arnisaeus from Medicine, Christoph Besold from Law, and Adam Contzen from Theology. I show how each Politica author?s disciplinary background inflected their construction of politics as an academic discipline, and how this in turn shaped their opinions on the confessional and constitutional debates which were then fracturing the Holy Roman Empire. While the dissertation does focus on the differences among these figures, it also tracks a trajectory which they all participated in. I argue that their attempts to discipline politics as a subject resulted in the centering of the state as a disciplinary and administrative institution. Their motivation was to prevent political upheaval through the application of technical expertise, which meant that they were able to find ever more aspects of human life which required treatment under the rubric of political philosophy, because almost anything could be conceived of as either a threat or a source of strength for the political order. This in turn suggested a vastly expanded conception of the regulatory and disciplinary powers of the state. I thus contend that, although the Politica writers are mostly forgotten today, they represent a critical phase in the intellectual development of the idea of the state. University of California, Berkeley 2018-11-21 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10930815 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic European history
spellingShingle European history
Staley, Maxwell Reed
A Most Dangerous Science| Discipline and German Political Philosophy, 1600-1648
description <p>This dissertation tracks the development of German political philosophy over the course of the first half of the seventeenth century, with an emphasis on the disciplinary, methodological, and pedagogical concerns of Politica writers. These figures produced large-scale technical textbooks on politics, which attempted to make sense of the chaotic civil sphere through the application of disciplinary structures. The main influences on their thought came from the sixteenth century: Aristotelianism, reason of state, natural law, and neostoicism were the competing traditions that they attempted to fit into comprehensive treatments of their subject. Generally, these thinkers have been organized by historians into schools divided by their political and confessional commitments. I argue that, while these factors were important, their disciplinary and methodological choices also decisively shaped their vision of politics, and indeed their positions on the critical questions of their day. I do this by focusing on four specific writers, one from each of the four faculties of the early modern university: Bartholomaus Keckermann from the arts faculty, Henning Arnisaeus from Medicine, Christoph Besold from Law, and Adam Contzen from Theology. I show how each Politica author?s disciplinary background inflected their construction of politics as an academic discipline, and how this in turn shaped their opinions on the confessional and constitutional debates which were then fracturing the Holy Roman Empire. While the dissertation does focus on the differences among these figures, it also tracks a trajectory which they all participated in. I argue that their attempts to discipline politics as a subject resulted in the centering of the state as a disciplinary and administrative institution. Their motivation was to prevent political upheaval through the application of technical expertise, which meant that they were able to find ever more aspects of human life which required treatment under the rubric of political philosophy, because almost anything could be conceived of as either a threat or a source of strength for the political order. This in turn suggested a vastly expanded conception of the regulatory and disciplinary powers of the state. I thus contend that, although the Politica writers are mostly forgotten today, they represent a critical phase in the intellectual development of the idea of the state.
author Staley, Maxwell Reed
author_facet Staley, Maxwell Reed
author_sort Staley, Maxwell Reed
title A Most Dangerous Science| Discipline and German Political Philosophy, 1600-1648
title_short A Most Dangerous Science| Discipline and German Political Philosophy, 1600-1648
title_full A Most Dangerous Science| Discipline and German Political Philosophy, 1600-1648
title_fullStr A Most Dangerous Science| Discipline and German Political Philosophy, 1600-1648
title_full_unstemmed A Most Dangerous Science| Discipline and German Political Philosophy, 1600-1648
title_sort most dangerous science| discipline and german political philosophy, 1600-1648
publisher University of California, Berkeley
publishDate 2018
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10930815
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