54 How politics works
liberalism vs. political liberalism,
7
neoliberalism vs. liberalism/social democracy,
Robert Nozick’s (1938–2002) argument for a minimal state (minarchism) vs. John
Rawls’s (1921–2002) two principles of justice:
8
these are only some episodes of the
controversy, which is as old as the rise of capitalism as a force capable of shaping
the entire society including politics. Never before in history has the economy held
such sway on the whole of human life, a phenomenon later magnified by globalisa-
tion. A further, less influential
episode is anarcho-capitalism, a right-wing version
of libertarianism (a communist version also exists);
9
it recommends giving back
to the market all state functions, also giving up – as propounded by Murray N.
Rothbard (1926–1995) – its monopoly of force. This is one of the many episodes
10
in which radical and marginalised theories, which fail to build up any significant
political support, can nonetheless provide arguments and recipes of use to the strug-
gles developing in mainstream parties (libertarian positions have popped up in the
debates inside the Republican Party in the USA since Ronald Reagan).
In a very distant corner in the gallery of order models we find Georg W. F. Hegel
(1770–1831) and Marx, or rather Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. To be true, his-
toricist thinkers who see and justify political regimes
on the basis of their corre-
spondence with a given stage of history (be it history of the Spirit/Logos or the
class struggle) do not advance abstract models of polity. Hegel certainly did not; in
any case, unlike his thoughts on the individual and freedom, his philosophy of the
state makes him nowadays a ‘dead dog’
11
even more so than he was in the 1850s, as
Marx saw him with regret in this shape – and reacted by flirting (‘coquetting’) with
Hegel’s dialectics in the philosophical passages of
Capital.
12
The ‘model’ devised by
Marx and Engels belongs to the philosophy of history and political economy rather
than political philosophy, and regards political regimes as resulting (like a ‘super-
structure’) from the respective stage of class struggle between ‘freeman and slave,
patrician and plebeian, lord and serf . . . in a word, oppressor and oppressed’ – as
they wrote at the outset of the
Manifesto of the Communist Party (Marx and Engels
1848, 14). The last stage – between bourgeoisie and proletariat – of this struggle
was thought to lead to a revolution terminating all class oppression and introduc-
ing first an egalitarian society based on the principle that everyone gets as much as
s/he contributes to society with her/his labour, later evolving into a higher stage of
communism under the very different principle ‘from each according to his ability,
to each according to his needs!’ The state as bureaucratic machinery is reduced to a
minimum in the first stage and will disappear in the developed communist society,
giving room – according to Engels – to a mere ‘administration of things’.
13
Of the two main traditions that developed from Marx and Engels, the
socialist or
social-democratic one merged somehow with progressive liberalism, giving shape
and justification to the mainly European model of democracy we have seen above.
The communist strain produced with Lenin (1870–1924) the model of a radically
egalitarian society and cannot be separated from the disasters it produced: a party
dictatorship that for a long while defended its political and ideological power and
privileges by means of state terrorism (Stalinism killed more people by the millions
than National Socialism) and after the initial post-revolutionary stage was never
Order, institutions, models
55
able to really boost productive forces. In
North Korea, under Chinese protection,
communism has even produced a dynastic monarchy or rather family dictator-
ship. That Soviet communism was, nonetheless, a model for decades, or at least an
example (‘Let’s do like in Russia!’), for the revolt of oppressed people and some
new regimes around the world, is telling about the force of myth and ideology in
generating mass movements, as well as for the only relative and fragile availability of
masses for rational information and open discussion. Worth noting is, however, the
claim sometime raised by Chinese officials that their own conjunction of paternal
and efficient party leadership (in fact a nationalist techno-bureaucracy) and capital-
ist economy (with a mix of public and private enterprise) represents an alternative
to conflict-ridden Western democracy with its stagnating economy. It could be
asked if this alleged model, hostile to diversity, plurality and productive conflict,
has any ties with the ideal of harmony deriving
from the Confucian tradition, but
connections and influences are, on this general level, difficult to locate and prove.
This was a survey of the most relevant models of political order developed
in Europe and later in America, which are still present today in the political and
theoretical debate in a more or less influential way. In Chapter 5, §4 the question if
China can be regarded as another model will be briefly addressed.
Notes
1 Or
pax augustea, the peace that prevailed in and around the Roman empire, which
included all Mediterranean regions, from BCE 31 (Octavian’s
victory over Marc
Anthony) until at least AD 180 (death of Marcus Aurelius).
2 For example Hobbes in Part I, Chapter 13 of
Leviathan: ‘The passions that incline men
to peace are fear of death; desire of such things as are necessary to commodious living,
and a hope by their industry to obtain them’ (Hobbes 1651, 86). More on passions and
politics in the Epilogue.
3 In this matter, I rely heavily on Franz Neumann’s seminal essay
Angst und Politik/Fear
and Politics, written in 1954 (Neumann 1954). Neumann, a German jurist who emi-
grated to the United States, was close to the
Institute of Social Research, the New York
site of the so-called Frankfurt School in the 1930–40s. I find translating
Angst to mean
‘anxiety’, as in the published English version, distorting.
4 A follower of Hobbes in an Islamic country could easily adopt the Islamic creed or
sha-
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