ABSTRACT

This book combines philosophical, intellectual-historical and political-theoretical methodologies to provide a new synoptic reading of the history of German political philosophy. Incorporating chapters on the political ideas of Luther and Zwingli, on the politics of the early Enlightenment, on Idealism, on Historicism and Lukács, on early Twentieth-Century political theology, on the Frankfurt School, and on Habermas and Luhmann, the book sets out both a broad and a detailed discussion of German political reflection from the Reformation to the present. In doing so, it explains how the development of German political philosophy is marked by a continual concern with certain unresolved and recurrent problems. It claims that all the major positions address questions relating to the origin of law, that all seek to account for the relation between legal validity and metaphysical and theological superstructures, and that all are centred on the attempt to conceptualise and reconstruct the character of the legal subject.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction

chapter |40 pages

The early Enlightenment

The laws of which nature?

chapter |31 pages

German idealism

The Enlightenment and the reconstruction of legal metaphysics

chapter |29 pages

Historicism and romanticism

Against liberalism as metaphysics

chapter |31 pages

Positivism and organic theory

The two faces of early German liberalism

chapter |22 pages

The vitalist interlude

Depersonalization and the law

chapter |12 pages

Critical theory and the law

chapter |12 pages

The dialectics of refoundation

The politics of humanism and anti-humanism

chapter |26 pages

Jürgen Habermas and Niklas Luhmann

Two rival critiques of metaphysics

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion