Hannah Arendt and Political Theology: A Displaced Encounter*



Título del documento: Hannah Arendt and Political Theology: A Displaced Encounter*
Revista: Pléyade (Santiago)
Base de datos: CLASE
Número de sistema: 000374429
ISSN: 0718-655X
Autores: 1
Instituciones: 1University of Antwerp, Department of Philosophy, Amberes. Bélgica
Año:
Periodo: Jul-Dic
Número: 8
Paginación: 19-35
País: Chile
Idioma: Inglés
Tipo de documento: Artículo
Enfoque: Analítico, descriptivo
Resumen en inglés Despite the recent revival of interest in Weimar political theology to rethink the relationship between religion and politics, one name is hardly ever mentioned in these debates: Hannah Arendt. Arendt’s apparent silence on this issue is peculiar because not only did she intellectually mature in the Weimar context and did she personally know many of the protagonists of the Weimar political theology debate, but also and especially because Carl Schmitt’s famous thesis that all political concepts are in reality secularized theological concepts is obviously diametrically opposed to Arendt’s idea of a self-contained politics. This paper argues that the reason why Arendt did not intervene directly in this debate is that she was mainly concerned with deconstructing the more encompassing claim that politics requires a force external to it, the origins of which she traces back to Plato’s attempt to transform political action into a mode of fabrication. It will be shown that the main target of Arendt’s political thought is therefore not political theology, but what we could tentatively call “political technology.”
Disciplinas: Ciencia política,
Religión
Palabras clave: Historia y filosofía de la política,
Religión y sociedad,
Arendt, Hannah,
Teología política,
Secularismo,
Heidegger, Martin,
Tecnología
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