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Eric Voegelin

Eric Voegelin (born Erich Hermann Wilhelm Vögelin, German: [ˈføːgəliːn]; 1901–1985) was a German-American political philosopher. He was born in Cologne, and educated in political science at the University of Vienna, where he became an associate professor of political science in the law faculty. In 1938, he and his wife fled from the Nazi forces which had entered Vienna. They emigrated to the United States, where they became citizens in 1944. He spent most of his academic career at Louisiana State University, the University of Munich and the Hoover Institution of Stanford University.

Eric Voegelin
Born
Erich Hermann Wilhelm Vögelin

(1901-01-03)January 3, 1901
DiedJanuary 19, 1985(1985-01-19) (aged 84)
Alma materUniversity of Vienna
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolPerennial philosophy[1]
Doctoral advisorHans Kelsen[2]
Main interests
Notable ideas

Early life

Voegelin was born in Cologne on January 3, 1901. His parents moved to Vienna in 1910, and he eventually studied at the University of Vienna. The advisers on his dissertation were Hans Kelsen and Othmar Spann. After his habilitation there in 1928, he taught political theory and sociology. In Austria, Voegelin began lasting friendships with Alfred Schütz[5] and with F. A. Hayek.[6]

Career

As a result of the Anschluss in 1938, Voegelin was fired from his job. Narrowly avoiding arrest by the Gestapo and after a brief stay in Switzerland, he arrived in the United States. He taught at various universities before he joined Louisiana State University's Department of Government in 1942. Voegelin remained in Baton Rouge until 1958, when he accepted an offer by Munich's Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität to fill Max Weber's former chair in political science, which had been unoccupied since Weber's death in 1920. In Munich, he founded the Institut für Politische Wissenschaft. Voegelin returned to the United States in 1969 to join Stanford University's Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace as Henry Salvatori Fellow. There he continued his work until his death. He was a member of the Philadelphia Society.[7]

Although some have found his books obscure, according to his student Ellis Sandoz, he was a "wonderfully lucid lecturer with the gift of explaining with complete intelligibility the most abstruse theories to the comprehension and fascination" of his students.[8]

Work

In his later life Voegelin worked to account for the endemic political violence of the twentieth century, in an effort variously referred to as a philosophy of politics, history, or consciousness. In Voegelin's Weltanschauung, he "blamed a flawed utopian interpretation of Christianity for spawning totalitarian movements like Nazism and Communism."[9] Voegelin eschewed any ideological labels or categorizations that readers and followers attempted to impose on his work.

Voegelin published scores of books, essays, and reviews in his lifetime. An early work was Die politischen Religionen (1938; The Political Religions), on totalitarian ideologies as political religions due to their structural similarities to religion. He wrote the multi-volume (English-language) Order and History, which began publication in 1956 and remained incomplete at the time of his death 29 years later. His 1951 Charles Walgreen lectures, published as The New Science of Politics, is sometimes seen as a prolegomenon to this series, and remains his best known work. He left many manuscripts unpublished, including a history of political ideas, which has since been published in eight volumes.

Order and History was originally conceived as a five-volume examination of the history of order occasioned by Voegelin's personal experience of the disorder of his time. The first three volumes, Israel and Revelation, The World of the Polis, and Plato and Aristotle, appeared in rapid succession in 1956 and 1957 and focused on the evocations of order in the ancient Near East and Greece.

Voegelin then encountered difficulties which slowed down the publication. This, combined with his university administrative duties and work related to the new institute, meant that seventeen years separated the fourth from the third volume. His new concerns were indicated in the 1966 German collection Anamnesis: Zur Theorie der Geschichte und Politik. The fourth volume, The Ecumenic Age, appeared in 1974. It broke with the chronological pattern of the previous volumes by investigating symbolizations of order ranging in time from the Sumerian King List to Hegel. Work on the final volume, In Search of Order, occupied Voegelin's final days and it was published posthumously in 1987.[original research?]

One of Voegelin's main points in his later work is that our experience of transcendence conveys a sense of order. Although transcendence can never be fully defined or described, it may be conveyed in symbols. A particular sense of transcendent order serves as a basis for a particular political order. A philosophy of consciousness can therefore become a philosophy of politics. Insights may become fossilised as dogma.

Voegelin is more interested in the ontological issues that arise from these experiences than the epistemological questions of how we know that a vision of order is true or not. For Voegelin, the essence of truth is trust. All philosophy begins with experience of the divine. Since God is experienced as good, one can be confident that reality is knowable. Given the possibility of knowledge, Voegelin holds there are two modes: intentionality and luminosity. Visions of order belong to the latter category. The truth of any vision is confirmed by its orthodoxy, by what Voegelin jokingly calls its lack of originality.

Voegelin's work does not fit in any standard classifications, although some of his readers[who?] have found similarities in it to contemporaneous works by, for example, Ernst Cassirer, Martin Heidegger, and Hans-Georg Gadamer. Voegelin often invents terms or uses old ones in new ways. However, there are patterns in his work with which the reader can quickly become familiar.

According to Ellis Sandoz, Voegelin may well be America's leading philosopher, and is rightly compared with the premier minds of our century and, perhaps, of the millennia.[8] Thomas Altizer has said that Order and History "may someday be perceived as the most important work of Old Testament scholarship ever written in the United States," adding that it is noteworthy that it was written by a political scientist and philosopher.[10]

Among indications of growing engagement with Voegelin's work are the 305 page international bibliography published in 2000 by Munich's Wilhelm Fink Verlag; the presence of dedicated research centers at universities in the United States, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom; the appearance of recent translations in languages ranging from Portuguese to Japanese; and the publishing of a 34 volume collection of his primary works by the University of Missouri Press and various primary and secondary works offered by the Eric-Voegelin-Archiv of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität.

On Gnosticism

In his The New Science of Politics, Order and History, and Science, Politics and Gnosticism, Voegelin opposed what he believed to be unsound Gnostic influences in politics.

Eugene Webb stated that Voegelin understood "gnosis" as

a purported direct, immediate apprehension or vision of truth without the need for critical reflection; the special gift of a spiritual and cognitive elite[11]

and 'Gnosticism' as

A type of thinking that claims absolute cognitive mastery of reality. Relying as it does on a claim to gnosis, gnosticism considers its knowledge not subject to criticism. Gnosticism may take transcendentalizing (as in the case of the Gnostic movement of late antiquity) or immanentizing forms (as in the case of Marxism).[12]

Apart from the Classical Christian writers against heresy, his sources on Gnosticism were secondary since the texts of the Nag Hammadi library were not yet widely available. For example, Voegelin used Hans Urs von Balthasar, Henri de Lubac, and Hans Jonas.[13]

Voegelin perceived similarities between ancient Gnosticism and modernist political theories, particularly Communism and Nazism. He identified the root of the Gnostic impulse as alienation, that is, a sense of disconnection from society and a belief that this lack is the result of the inherent disorder, or even evil, of the world. That alienation has two effects:

  • The first is the belief that the disorder of the world can be transcended by extraordinary insight, learning, or knowledge, called a Gnostic Speculation by Voegelin (the Gnostics themselves referred to that as gnosis).
  • The second is the desire to implement and or create a policy to actualize the speculation, or Immanentize the Eschaton: to create a sort of heaven on earth within history.

According to Voegelin, the Gnostics really reject the Christian eschaton of the kingdom of God and replace it with a human form of salvation through esoteric ritual or practice.[citation needed]

The primary feature that characterizes a tendency as gnostic for Voegelin is that it is motivated by the notion that the world and humanity can be fundamentally transformed and perfected through the intervention of a chosen group of people (an elite), a man-god, or men-Gods. The Übermensch is the chosen one who has a kind of special knowledge (like magic or science) about how to perfect human existence.[citation needed]

That stands in contrast to a notion of redemption that is achieved through the reconciliation of mankind with the divine. Marxism, therefore, qualifies as "gnostic" because it purports that the perfect society on earth can be established once capitalism has been overthrown by the proletariat. Likewise, Nazism is seen as "gnostic" because it posits that utopia can be achieved by attaining racial purity once the master race has freed itself of the racially inferior and the degenerate.[citation needed]

In both cases specifically analyzed by Voegelin, the totalitarian impulse is derived from the alienation of the individuals from the rest of society. That leads to a desire to dominate (libido dominandi), which has its roots in the Gnostic's conviction of the imperative of his vision but also in his lack of concord with a large body of his society. As a result, there is very little regard for the welfare of those who are harmed by the resulting politics, which ranges from coercive to calamitous (such as the English proverb: "You have to crack a few eggs to make an omelet" or its Russian variety: "When you chop wood, chips fly").[citation needed]

Immanentizing the eschaton

One of his most quoted passages (by such figures as William F. Buckley Jr.)[14] is:

The problem of an eidos in history, hence, arises only when a Christian transcendental fulfillment becomes immanentized. Such an immanentist hypostasis of the eschaton, however, is a theoretical fallacy.[15]

From this comes the catchphrase: "Don't immanentize the eschaton!", which simply means: "Do not try to make that which belongs to the afterlife happen here and now" or "Don't try to create Heaven on Earth."

When Voegelin uses the term gnosis negatively, it is to reflect the word as found in the Manichaeism and Valentinianism of antiquity. As it is later then immanentized (or manifest) in modernity in the wake of Joachim of Fiore and in the various ideological movements outlined in his works.[16] Voegelin also builds on the term "Gnosticism" as it is defined by Hans Jonas in his The Gnostic Religion, in reference to Heidegger's Gnosticism, which is to have an understanding and control over reality that makes mankind as powerful as the role of God in reality.

Voegelin was arguing from a Hellenistic position that good gnosis is derived from pistis (faith) and that the pagan tradition made a false distinction between faith and noesis. Furthermore, the dualist perspective was the very essence of gnosticism via the misuse of noema and caused a destructive division between the internal and external world in human consciousness. To reconcile the internal (subjective) and external (objective) world of consciousness was the restoration of order.[17][18]

Social alienation

Voegelin identified the root of the Gnostic impulse as alienation, (a sense of disconnection with society) and a belief that the disconnection is the result of the inherent disorder or even evil of the world. The alienation has two effects:

  • The belief that the disorder of the world can be transcended by extraordinary insight, learning, or knowledge, called a Gnostic Speculation by Voegelin (the Gnostics themselves referred to it as gnosis).
  • The desire to create and implement a policy to actualize the speculation, or as Voegelin described it, to Immanentize the Eschaton, to create a sort of heaven on earth within history by triggering the Apocalypse[citation needed].

Critique of Rationalism and Phenomenology

Spiritual revival

Voegelin's work does not lay out a program of reform or offer a doctrine of recovery from what he termed the "demono-maniacal" in modern politics. However, interspersed in his writings is the idea of a spiritual recovery of the primary experiences of divine order. He was not interested so much in what religious dogmas might result in personal salvation but rather a recovery of the human in the classical sense of the daimonios aner (Plato's term for "the spiritual man"). He did not speculate on the institutional forms in which a spiritual recovery might take place but expressed confidence that the current 500-year cycle of secularism would come to an end because he stated that "you cannot deny the human forever."[citation needed]

In an essay published in 1965,[19] Voegelin suggested that the Soviet Union would collapse from within because of its historical roots in philosophy and Christianity. Later, at an informal talk given at University College, Dublin, Ireland in 1972,[20] Voegelin suggested the Soviet Union might collapse by 1980 because of its failure to succeed in its domestic commitments and external political challenges.

Reception

Eugene Webb criticized Voegelin's conception of gnosis and his analysis of Gnosticism in general. In the article "Voegelin's Gnosticism Reconsidered," Webb explained that Voegelin's concept of Gnosticism was conceived "not primarily to describe ancient phenomena but to help us understand some modern ones for which the evidence is a great deal clearer."[21][page needed] Webb continues, "the category (of Gnosticism) is of limited usefulness for the purpose to which he put it… and the fact that the idea of Gnosticism as such has become so problematic and complex in recent years must at the very least undercut Voegelin's effort to trace a historical line of descent from ancient sources to the modern phenomena he tried to use them to illuminate."[21][page needed]

Because Voegelin applied the concept of gnosis to a wide array of ideologies and movements such as Marxism, communism, National Socialism, progressivism, liberalism, and humanism,[22] critics have proposed that Voegelin's concept of Gnosis lacks theoretical precision.[23][24] Therefore, Voegelin's gnosis can, according to the criticis, hardly serve as a scientific basis for an analysis of political movements. Rather, the term "Gnosticism" as used by Voegelin is more of an invective just as "when on the lowest level of propaganda those who do not conform with one's own opinion are smeared as communists."[25]

Selected bibliography

  • Über die Form des amerikanischen Geistes, Tübingen 1928
  • Rasse und Staat. Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen 1933
  • Die Rassenidee in der Geistesgeschichte von Ray bis Carus. Junker & Dünnhaupt Berlin 1933
  • Der autoritäre Staat, Wien 1936
  • Die politischen Religionen. Bermann Fischer, Stockholm 1939.[26] Neuauflage München 1996
  • The New Science of Politics. An Introduction, Chicago University Press, Chicago 1952
  • Order and History, 5 Bde. Baton Rouge 1956–1987
  • Wissenschaft, Politik und Gnosis, München 1959, English translation: Science, Politics and Gnosticism, Regnery Publishing Inc., Washington DC, 1968
  • Anamnesis. Zur Theorie der Geschichte und Politik, München 1966
  • From Enlightment to Revolution, Durham 1975
  • Autobiographische Reflexionen, Hg. Peter J. Opitz. München 1994
  • Das Volk Gottes. Sektenbewegungen und der Geist der Moderne, München 1994
  • Der Gottesmord. Zur Genese und Gestalt der modernen politischen Gnosis, München 1999
  • Ordnung und Geschichte, 10 Bde. Hg. Dietmar Herz & Peter Opitz, München 2001–2005
  • Die Neue Wissenschaft der Politik, München 2004
  • Anamnesis. Zur Theorie von Geschichte und Politik, Freiburg 2005
  • Das Drama des Menschseins, Passagen, Wien 2007 ISBN 978-3851657241
  • Das Jüngste Gericht Friedrich Nietzsches. Matthes & Seitz, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3882218879
  • Conversations with Eric Voegelin, Mitschrift von vier Vorlesungen in Montreal in den Jahren 1965, 1967, 1970, 1976. Thomas More Institute, Montreal 1980
  • Briefwechsel 1939–1949: Eric Voegelin und Hermann Broch, In: Sinn und Form, Heft 2/2008, S. 149–174
  • Briefwechsel, Eric Voegelin und Karl Löwith, In: Sinn und Form, Heft 6/2007, S. 764–794
  • Realitätsfinsternis. Übers. Dora Fischer-Barnicol, Hg. und Nachwort Peter J.Opitz. Matthes & Seitz, Berlin 2010 ISBN 978-3882216967
  • Was ist Geschichte? Übers. Dora Fischer-Barnicol, Hg. und Vorwort Peter J.Opitz. Matthes & Seitz, Berlin 2015 ISBN 978-3882210460
  • Glaube und Wissen. Der Briefwechsel zwischen Eric Voegelin und Leo Strauss von 1934 bis 1964. Hg. Peter J. Opitz; Wilhelm Fink, München 2010 ISBN 978-3770549672
  • Luther und Calvin. Die große Verwirrung. Hg. Peter J. Opitz. Wilhelm Fink, München 2011, ISBN 978-3770551590
  • Die Natur des Rechts. Übers. und Nachwort Thomas Nawrath. Matthes & Seitz Berlin, Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3882216172
Rezension
  • Die Ursprünge des Totalitarismus, Rezension zu Arendts Totalitarismus-Buch, in: Über den Totalitarismus. Texte Hannah Arendts aus den Jahren 1951 und 1953. S. 33–42. Übers. Ursula Ludz. Hg. Ingeborg Nordmann. HAIT, Dresden 1998 ISBN 3931648176 [27]
The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin
  • Volume 1: On the Form of the American Mind, edited by Jürgen Gebhardt and Barry Cooper
  • Volume 2: Race and State, edited by Klaus Vondung
  • Volume 3: The History of the Race Idea: From Ray to Carus, edited by Klaus Vondung
  • Volume 4: The Authoritarian State: An Essay on the Problem of the Austrian State, edited by Gilbert Weiss
  • Volume 5: Modernity without Restraint: The Political Religions; The New Science of Politics; and Science, Politics, and Gnosticism, edited by Manfred Henningsen
  • Volume 6: Anamnesis: On the Theory of History and Politics, edited by David Walsh
  • Volume 7: Published Essays, 1922–1928, Edited by Thomas W. Heilke and John von Heyking
  • Volume 8: Published Essays, 1929–1933, edited by Thomas W. Heilke and John von Heyking
  • Volume 9: Published Essays, 1934–1939, edited by Thomas W. Heilke
  • Volume 10: Published Essays, 1940–1952, edited by Ellis Sandoz
  • Volume 11: Published Essays, 1953–1965, edited by Ellis Sandoz
  • Volume 12: Published Essays, 1966–1985, edited by Ellis Sandoz
  • Volume 13: Selected Book Reviews, edited by Jodi Cockerill and Barry Cooper
  • Volume 14: Order and History, Volume I, Israel and Revelation, edited by Maurice P. Hogan
  • Volume 15: Order and History, Volume II, The World of the Polis, edited by Athanasios Moulakis
  • Volume 16: Order and History, Volume III, Plato and Aristotle, edited by Dante Germino
  • Volume 17: Order and History, Volume IV, The Ecumenic Age, edited by Michael Franz
  • Volume 18: Order and History, Volume V, In Search of Order, edited by Ellis Sandoz
  • Volume 19: History of Political Ideas, Volume I, Hellenism, Rome, and Early Christianity, edited by Athanisios Moulakis
  • Volume 20: History of Political Ideas, Volume II, The Middle Ages to Aquinas, edited by Peter von Sivers
  • Volume 21: History of Political Ideas, Volume III, The Later Middle Ages, edited by David Walsh
  • Volume 22: History of Political Ideas, Volume IV, Renaissance and Reformation, edited by David L. Morse and William M. Thompson
  • Volume 23: History of Political Ideas, Volume V, Religion and the Rise of Modernity, edited by James L. Wiser
  • Volume 24: History of Political Ideas, Volume VI, Revolution and the New Science, edited by Barry Cooper
  • Volume 25: History of Political Ideas, Volume VII, The New Order and Last Orientation, edited by Jürgen Gebhardt and Thomas A. Hollweck
  • Volume 26: History of Political Ideas, Volume VIII, Crisis and the Apocalypse of Man, edited by David Walsh
  • Volume 27: Nature of the Law and Related Legal Writings, edited by Robert Anthony Pascal, James Lee Babin, and John William Corrington
  • Volume 28: What Is History? And Other Late Unpublished Writings, edited by Thomas A. Hollweck and Paul Caringella
  • Volume 29: Selected Correspondence, 1924–1949, edited with an introduction by Thomas Hollweck
  • Volume 30: Selected Correspondence, 1950–1984, edited with an introduction by Thomas Hollweck
  • Volume 31: Hitler and the Germans, edited by Detlev Clemens and Brendan Purcell
  • Volume 32: The Theory of Governance and Other Miscellaneous Papers, 1921–1938, edited by William Petropulos and Gilbert Weiss
  • Volume 33: The Drama of Humanity and Other Miscellaneous Papers, 1939–1985, edited by William Petropulos and Gilbert Weiss
  • Volume 34: Autobiographical Reflections: Revised Edition, with a Voegelin Glossary and Cumulative Index, edited with introductions by Ellis Sandoz

See also

References

  1. ^ David R. Cole, The Political Philosophy of Eric Voegelin and His Followers, Edwin Mellen Press, 2008, p. iv.
  2. ^ Christian Damböck (ed.), Influences on the Aufbau, Springer, 2015, p. 258.
  3. ^ Eric Voegelin, "Reason: The Classic Experience," in Voegelin, Published Essays, 1966–1985, vol. 12 of The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin, ed. Ellis Sandoz (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1990), 289–290; Order and History, Volume IV: The Ecumenic Age, vol. 17 of The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin, ed. Michael Franz (Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 2000), 408.
  4. ^ "Professor Bruno Latour's Lecture on Politics and Religion: A Reading of Eric Voegelin: Bruno Latour's lecture on politics and religion". July 27, 2015. from the original on August 16, 2018. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  5. ^ Szakolczai, Arpad (January 25, 2013). "Eric Voegelin and Alfred Schütz: A Friendship That Lasted a Lifetime". VoegelinView. from the original on October 4, 2020. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  6. ^ Federici, Michael. Eric Voegelin: The Restoration of Order, ISI Books, 2002, p. 1
  7. ^ (PDF), The Philadelphia society, archived from the original (PDF) on January 18, 2012
  8. ^ a b Ellis Sandoz: "Eric Voegelin, January 3, 1901 – January 19, 1985", Political Science Reviewer 16 (1986).
  9. ^ McDonald, Marci (October 2004). "The Man Behind Stephen Harper". The Walrus. CA. from the original on November 7, 2014. Retrieved January 18, 2013.
  10. ^ Thomas J.J. Altizer: Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 1975 Vol. XLIII; Iss. 4. Archived from the original on 9 December 2021 on the Wayback Machine.
  11. ^ Webb 1981, p. 282: 'According to Voegelin, the claim to gnosis may take intellectual, emotional, and volitional forms.'
  12. ^ Webb 1981, p. 282 "'"A type of thinking that claims absolute cognitive mastery of reality. Relying as it does on a claim to gnosis, gnosticism considers its knowledge not subject to criticism. As a religious or quasi-religious movement, gnosticism may take transcendentalizing (as in the case of the Gnostic movement of late antiquity) or immanentizing forms (as in the case of Marxism)." [Webb 1981:282]'"
  13. ^ Voegelin, Eric (1989), Sandoz, Ellis; Weiss, Gilbert; Petropoulos, William (eds.), The Collected Works, Louisiana State University Press, ISBN 0-80711826-5.
  14. ^ Buckley Jr., William F. Cancel Your Own Goddam Subscription: Notes & Asides from National Review, Basic Books, 2007, pp. 23–24
  15. ^ Voegelin 1987, p. 120.
  16. ^ Voegelin 1987, chap. 4.
  17. ^ Voegelin, Eric, The ecumenic age, order & History, vol. 4, esp. Introduction & chap. 5.
  18. ^ Voegelin, Eric (2000), Franz, Michael (ed.), The collected works, vol. 17, University of Missouri Press.
  19. ^ "In Search of the Ground", Published Essays, 1953—1965, p. 239 (Collected Works Vol 11)
  20. ^ Brendan Purcell (February 17, 2009). "The Irish Dialogue with Eric Voegelin". Voegelin View. from the original on July 15, 2018. Retrieved July 15, 2018.
  21. ^ a b Webb 2005.
  22. ^ Voegelin, Eric (1987). The new science of politics : an introduction (pbk.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 128ff., 173ffn. ISBN 978-0-22686114-2. OCLC 16992786. from the original on January 20, 2023. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  23. ^ Hans, Kelsen (April 2017). Secular Religion A Polemic against the Misinterpretation of Modern Social Philosophy, Science and Politics as "New Religions". Walter, Robert, Jabloner, Clemens, Zeleny, Klaus (2. Auflage ed.). Stuttgart: Franz-Steinerm. ISBN 978-3-51511760-9. OCLC 988613915.
  24. ^ Jabloner, Clemens (2013). Secular religion : Rezeption und Kritik von Hans Kelsens Auseinandersetzung mit Religion und Wissenschaft. Wien: Manz. pp. 19–42. ISBN 9783214147556. OCLC 864572584.
  25. ^ Kelsen, Hans; Voegelin, Eric (2004). Arnold, Eckhart (ed.). A new science of politics : Hans Kelsen's reply to Eric Voegelin's "New science of politics" : a contribution to the critique of ideology. Frankfurt: Ontos Verlag. p. 107. ISBN 978-3-11032737-3. OCLC 607253659.
  26. ^ geplant: Wien 1938. Nach der Besetzung Österreichs durch die Deutschen in der schwedischen Firmen-Neugründung erschienen
  27. ^ Im Inhaltsverzeichnis ist Voegelins Originaltext nicht explizit genannt, sondern er steht lediglich unter einem summarischen Titel der Hg'in. Drei Teile auf deutsch: die Rezension selbst, Eine Antwort Arendts S. 42–51 und eine Abschließende Bemerkung Voegelins S. 51f. In einem Schluss-Kommentar geht die Hg'in auf die Unterschiede der beiden ein. Die Originaltexte zuerst in Englisch: E. V., The origins of totalitarism, in: Review of Politics, Hg. University of Notre Dame, South Bend, IN. Jg. 15, H. 1, 1953, pp. 68–76; sowie Arendt, A reply, pp. 76–84; und Voegelin, Concluding remarks, pp. 84s. Alle drei Teile auch im Reprint-Sammelband The crisis of modern times: Perspectives from the Review of Politics 1939–1962, Verlag: wie das Heft, 2007, ISBN 0268035067, E. V. pp. 272–280; Arendt pp. 280–287; E. V. pp. 287–289

Further reading

Primary literature

All of Voegelin's writing is published as his Collected Works (CW), reviewed by Mark Lilla, "Mr. Casaubon in America" The New York Review of Books 54/11 (June 28, 2007): 29–31.

Primary sources

  • The closest to an introduction to his thought in his own words is the Autobiographical Reflections.
  • Wagner, Gerhard; Weiss, Gilbert, eds. (2011), A Friendship That Lasted a Lifetime: The Correspondence Between Alfred Schutz and Eric Voegelin, Petropulos, William transl, University of Missouri Press, 240 pp.
  • Register of the Eric Voegelin papers 1901–1997 at the Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University Stanford, CA, 2012 (120 PDFs).

Secondary literature

  • Cooper, Barry: Eric Voegelin and the Foundations of Modern Political Science, University of Missouri Press, 1999.
  • Hund, Wulf D.: The Racism of Eric Voegelin. In: Journal of World Philosophies, 4, 2019, 2, pp. 1–22.
  • Federici, Michael: Eric Voegelin: The Restoration of Order, ISI Books 2002, basic introduction.
  • McAllister, Ted V: Leo Strauss, Eric Voegelin and The Search for a Postliberal Order' University Press of Kansas, 1995.
  • Sandoz, Ellis: The Voegelinian Revolution: A Biographical Introduction Louisiana State UP, 1981, advanced.
  • Trepanier, Lee, and Steven F. McGuire, eds. Eric Voegelin and the Continental Tradition: Explorations in Modern Political Thought (University of Missouri Press; 2011) 284 pp; essays on his relationship to Hegel, Schelling, Kierkegaard, Heidegger, and Gadamer.
  • Webb, Eugene (1981), Glossary of Voegelin terms online, p. 282, According to Voegelin, the claim to gnosis may take intellectual, emotional, and volitional forms..
  • Webb, Eugene: Eric Voegelin: Philosopher of History University of Washington Press, 1981.
  • ——— (2005), "Voegelin's "Gnosticism" Reconsidered", Political Science Reviewer, 34.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Eric Voegelin at Wikiquote
  • Works by or about Eric Voegelin at Internet Archive
  • Eric Voegelin papers at the Hoover Institution Archives
  • Eric-Voegelin-Archiv
  • The Eric Voegelin Institute, LSU
  • The Centre of Eric Voegelin Studies (EVS), Ghent University
  • Eric Voegelin Study Page
  • Brief Excerpts from Eric Voegelin's Works
  • Intellectual Conservatives Greatest Works No 23 September 25, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  • Eric Voegelin-Bibliothek at FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg (Eric Voegelin Library)

eric, voegelin, born, erich, hermann, wilhelm, vögelin, german, ˈføːgəliːn, 1901, 1985, german, american, political, philosopher, born, cologne, educated, political, science, university, vienna, where, became, associate, professor, political, science, faculty,. Eric Voegelin born Erich Hermann Wilhelm Vogelin German ˈfoːgeliːn 1901 1985 was a German American political philosopher He was born in Cologne and educated in political science at the University of Vienna where he became an associate professor of political science in the law faculty In 1938 he and his wife fled from the Nazi forces which had entered Vienna They emigrated to the United States where they became citizens in 1944 He spent most of his academic career at Louisiana State University the University of Munich and the Hoover Institution of Stanford University Eric VoegelinBornErich Hermann Wilhelm Vogelin 1901 01 03 January 3 1901Cologne German EmpireDiedJanuary 19 1985 1985 01 19 aged 84 Stanford California U S Alma materUniversity of ViennaEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolPerennial philosophy 1 Doctoral advisorHans Kelsen 2 Main interestsConsciousnessexistencehistorypolitical sciencespiritualityAnamnesis philosophy Notable ideasMetaxy as the permanent place where man is in between two poles of existence 3 criticism of Gnosticism Don t immanentize the eschaton Influences Pre Socratic philosophers Plato Aristotle Augustine Aquinas Bodin Schelling James Meyer Husserl Bergson Whitehead Commons Weber Mann Mises Lubac Hayek Schutz Strauss Gadamer Balthasar JonasInfluenced Leo Strauss Raymond Aron William F Buckley Jr Rudolf Bultmann Olavo de Carvalho Jurgen Gebhardt de Robert George Thierry Gontier fr William Havard Robert B Heilman Russell Kirk Frederick Lawrence Flannery O Connor Martin Palous Walker Percy Ellis Sandoz James V Schall Sir Roger Scruton Bruno Latour 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Work 4 On Gnosticism 4 1 Immanentizing the eschaton 4 2 Social alienation 4 3 Critique of Rationalism and Phenomenology 4 4 Spiritual revival 5 Reception 6 Selected bibliography 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary literature 9 2 Primary sources 9 3 Secondary literature 10 External linksEarly life EditVoegelin was born in Cologne on January 3 1901 His parents moved to Vienna in 1910 and he eventually studied at the University of Vienna The advisers on his dissertation were Hans Kelsen and Othmar Spann After his habilitation there in 1928 he taught political theory and sociology In Austria Voegelin began lasting friendships with Alfred Schutz 5 and with F A Hayek 6 Career EditAs a result of the Anschluss in 1938 Voegelin was fired from his job Narrowly avoiding arrest by the Gestapo and after a brief stay in Switzerland he arrived in the United States He taught at various universities before he joined Louisiana State University s Department of Government in 1942 Voegelin remained in Baton Rouge until 1958 when he accepted an offer by Munich s Ludwig Maximilians Universitat to fill Max Weber s former chair in political science which had been unoccupied since Weber s death in 1920 In Munich he founded the Institut fur Politische Wissenschaft Voegelin returned to the United States in 1969 to join Stanford University s Hoover Institution on War Revolution and Peace as Henry Salvatori Fellow There he continued his work until his death He was a member of the Philadelphia Society 7 Although some have found his books obscure according to his student Ellis Sandoz he was a wonderfully lucid lecturer with the gift of explaining with complete intelligibility the most abstruse theories to the comprehension and fascination of his students 8 Work EditIn his later life Voegelin worked to account for the endemic political violence of the twentieth century in an effort variously referred to as a philosophy of politics history or consciousness In Voegelin s Weltanschauung he blamed a flawed utopian interpretation of Christianity for spawning totalitarian movements like Nazism and Communism 9 Voegelin eschewed any ideological labels or categorizations that readers and followers attempted to impose on his work Voegelin published scores of books essays and reviews in his lifetime An early work was Die politischen Religionen 1938 The Political Religions on totalitarian ideologies as political religions due to their structural similarities to religion He wrote the multi volume English language Order and History which began publication in 1956 and remained incomplete at the time of his death 29 years later His 1951 Charles Walgreen lectures published as The New Science of Politics is sometimes seen as a prolegomenon to this series and remains his best known work He left many manuscripts unpublished including a history of political ideas which has since been published in eight volumes Order and History was originally conceived as a five volume examination of the history of order occasioned by Voegelin s personal experience of the disorder of his time The first three volumes Israel and Revelation The World of the Polis and Plato and Aristotle appeared in rapid succession in 1956 and 1957 and focused on the evocations of order in the ancient Near East and Greece Voegelin then encountered difficulties which slowed down the publication This combined with his university administrative duties and work related to the new institute meant that seventeen years separated the fourth from the third volume His new concerns were indicated in the 1966 German collection Anamnesis Zur Theorie der Geschichte und Politik The fourth volume The Ecumenic Age appeared in 1974 It broke with the chronological pattern of the previous volumes by investigating symbolizations of order ranging in time from the Sumerian King List to Hegel Work on the final volume In Search of Order occupied Voegelin s final days and it was published posthumously in 1987 original research One of Voegelin s main points in his later work is that our experience of transcendence conveys a sense of order Although transcendence can never be fully defined or described it may be conveyed in symbols A particular sense of transcendent order serves as a basis for a particular political order A philosophy of consciousness can therefore become a philosophy of politics Insights may become fossilised as dogma Voegelin is more interested in the ontological issues that arise from these experiences than the epistemological questions of how we know that a vision of order is true or not For Voegelin the essence of truth is trust All philosophy begins with experience of the divine Since God is experienced as good one can be confident that reality is knowable Given the possibility of knowledge Voegelin holds there are two modes intentionality and luminosity Visions of order belong to the latter category The truth of any vision is confirmed by its orthodoxy by what Voegelin jokingly calls its lack of originality Voegelin s work does not fit in any standard classifications although some of his readers who have found similarities in it to contemporaneous works by for example Ernst Cassirer Martin Heidegger and Hans Georg Gadamer Voegelin often invents terms or uses old ones in new ways However there are patterns in his work with which the reader can quickly become familiar According to Ellis Sandoz Voegelin may well be America s leading philosopher and is rightly compared with the premier minds of our century and perhaps of the millennia 8 Thomas Altizer has said that Order and History may someday be perceived as the most important work of Old Testament scholarship ever written in the United States adding that it is noteworthy that it was written by a political scientist and philosopher 10 Among indications of growing engagement with Voegelin s work are the 305 page international bibliography published in 2000 by Munich s Wilhelm Fink Verlag the presence of dedicated research centers at universities in the United States Germany Italy and the United Kingdom the appearance of recent translations in languages ranging from Portuguese to Japanese and the publishing of a 34 volume collection of his primary works by the University of Missouri Press and various primary and secondary works offered by the Eric Voegelin Archiv of Ludwig Maximilians Universitat On Gnosticism EditThis section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In his The New Science of Politics Order and History and Science Politics and Gnosticism Voegelin opposed what he believed to be unsound Gnostic influences in politics Eugene Webb stated that Voegelin understood gnosis as a purported direct immediate apprehension or vision of truth without the need for critical reflection the special gift of a spiritual and cognitive elite 11 and Gnosticism as A type of thinking that claims absolute cognitive mastery of reality Relying as it does on a claim to gnosis gnosticism considers its knowledge not subject to criticism Gnosticism may take transcendentalizing as in the case of the Gnostic movement of late antiquity or immanentizing forms as in the case of Marxism 12 Apart from the Classical Christian writers against heresy his sources on Gnosticism were secondary since the texts of the Nag Hammadi library were not yet widely available For example Voegelin used Hans Urs von Balthasar Henri de Lubac and Hans Jonas 13 Voegelin perceived similarities between ancient Gnosticism and modernist political theories particularly Communism and Nazism He identified the root of the Gnostic impulse as alienation that is a sense of disconnection from society and a belief that this lack is the result of the inherent disorder or even evil of the world That alienation has two effects The first is the belief that the disorder of the world can be transcended by extraordinary insight learning or knowledge called a Gnostic Speculation by Voegelin the Gnostics themselves referred to that as gnosis The second is the desire to implement and or create a policy to actualize the speculation or Immanentize the Eschaton to create a sort of heaven on earth within history According to Voegelin the Gnostics really reject the Christian eschaton of the kingdom of God and replace it with a human form of salvation through esoteric ritual or practice citation needed The primary feature that characterizes a tendency as gnostic for Voegelin is that it is motivated by the notion that the world and humanity can be fundamentally transformed and perfected through the intervention of a chosen group of people an elite a man god or men Gods The Ubermensch is the chosen one who has a kind of special knowledge like magic or science about how to perfect human existence citation needed That stands in contrast to a notion of redemption that is achieved through the reconciliation of mankind with the divine Marxism therefore qualifies as gnostic because it purports that the perfect society on earth can be established once capitalism has been overthrown by the proletariat Likewise Nazism is seen as gnostic because it posits that utopia can be achieved by attaining racial purity once the master race has freed itself of the racially inferior and the degenerate citation needed In both cases specifically analyzed by Voegelin the totalitarian impulse is derived from the alienation of the individuals from the rest of society That leads to a desire to dominate libido dominandi which has its roots in the Gnostic s conviction of the imperative of his vision but also in his lack of concord with a large body of his society As a result there is very little regard for the welfare of those who are harmed by the resulting politics which ranges from coercive to calamitous such as the English proverb You have to crack a few eggs to make an omelet or its Russian variety When you chop wood chips fly citation needed Immanentizing the eschaton Edit Main article Immanentize the eschaton One of his most quoted passages by such figures as William F Buckley Jr 14 is The problem of an eidos in history hence arises only when a Christian transcendental fulfillment becomes immanentized Such an immanentist hypostasis of the eschaton however is a theoretical fallacy 15 From this comes the catchphrase Don t immanentize the eschaton which simply means Do not try to make that which belongs to the afterlife happen here and now or Don t try to create Heaven on Earth When Voegelin uses the term gnosis negatively it is to reflect the word as found in the Manichaeism and Valentinianism of antiquity As it is later then immanentized or manifest in modernity in the wake of Joachim of Fiore and in the various ideological movements outlined in his works 16 Voegelin also builds on the term Gnosticism as it is defined by Hans Jonas in his The Gnostic Religion in reference to Heidegger s Gnosticism which is to have an understanding and control over reality that makes mankind as powerful as the role of God in reality Voegelin was arguing from a Hellenistic position that good gnosis is derived from pistis faith and that the pagan tradition made a false distinction between faith and noesis Furthermore the dualist perspective was the very essence of gnosticism via the misuse of noema and caused a destructive division between the internal and external world in human consciousness To reconcile the internal subjective and external objective world of consciousness was the restoration of order 17 18 Social alienation Edit Voegelin identified the root of the Gnostic impulse as alienation a sense of disconnection with society and a belief that the disconnection is the result of the inherent disorder or even evil of the world The alienation has two effects The belief that the disorder of the world can be transcended by extraordinary insight learning or knowledge called a Gnostic Speculation by Voegelin the Gnostics themselves referred to it as gnosis The desire to create and implement a policy to actualize the speculation or as Voegelin described it to Immanentize the Eschaton to create a sort of heaven on earth within history by triggering the Apocalypse citation needed Critique of Rationalism and Phenomenology Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2022 Spiritual revival Edit Voegelin s work does not lay out a program of reform or offer a doctrine of recovery from what he termed the demono maniacal in modern politics However interspersed in his writings is the idea of a spiritual recovery of the primary experiences of divine order He was not interested so much in what religious dogmas might result in personal salvation but rather a recovery of the human in the classical sense of the daimonios aner Plato s term for the spiritual man He did not speculate on the institutional forms in which a spiritual recovery might take place but expressed confidence that the current 500 year cycle of secularism would come to an end because he stated that you cannot deny the human forever citation needed In an essay published in 1965 19 Voegelin suggested that the Soviet Union would collapse from within because of its historical roots in philosophy and Christianity Later at an informal talk given at University College Dublin Ireland in 1972 20 Voegelin suggested the Soviet Union might collapse by 1980 because of its failure to succeed in its domestic commitments and external political challenges Reception EditEugene Webb criticized Voegelin s conception of gnosis and his analysis of Gnosticism in general In the article Voegelin s Gnosticism Reconsidered Webb explained that Voegelin s concept of Gnosticism was conceived not primarily to describe ancient phenomena but to help us understand some modern ones for which the evidence is a great deal clearer 21 page needed Webb continues the category of Gnosticism is of limited usefulness for the purpose to which he put it and the fact that the idea of Gnosticism as such has become so problematic and complex in recent years must at the very least undercut Voegelin s effort to trace a historical line of descent from ancient sources to the modern phenomena he tried to use them to illuminate 21 page needed Because Voegelin applied the concept of gnosis to a wide array of ideologies and movements such as Marxism communism National Socialism progressivism liberalism and humanism 22 critics have proposed that Voegelin s concept of Gnosis lacks theoretical precision 23 24 Therefore Voegelin s gnosis can according to the criticis hardly serve as a scientific basis for an analysis of political movements Rather the term Gnosticism as used by Voegelin is more of an invective just as when on the lowest level of propaganda those who do not conform with one s own opinion are smeared as communists 25 Selected bibliography EditUber die Form des amerikanischen Geistes Tubingen 1928 Rasse und Staat Mohr Siebeck Tubingen 1933 Die Rassenidee in der Geistesgeschichte von Ray bis Carus Junker amp Dunnhaupt Berlin 1933 Der autoritare Staat Wien 1936 Die politischen Religionen Bermann Fischer Stockholm 1939 26 Neuauflage Munchen 1996 The New Science of Politics An Introduction Chicago University Press Chicago 1952 Order and History 5 Bde Baton Rouge 1956 1987 Wissenschaft Politik und Gnosis Munchen 1959 English translation Science Politics and Gnosticism Regnery Publishing Inc Washington DC 1968 Anamnesis Zur Theorie der Geschichte und Politik Munchen 1966 From Enlightment to Revolution Durham 1975 Autobiographische Reflexionen Hg Peter J Opitz Munchen 1994 Das Volk Gottes Sektenbewegungen und der Geist der Moderne Munchen 1994 Der Gottesmord Zur Genese und Gestalt der modernen politischen Gnosis Munchen 1999 Ordnung und Geschichte 10 Bde Hg Dietmar Herz amp Peter Opitz Munchen 2001 2005 Die Neue Wissenschaft der Politik Munchen 2004 Anamnesis Zur Theorie von Geschichte und Politik Freiburg 2005 Das Drama des Menschseins Passagen Wien 2007 ISBN 978 3851657241 Das Jungste Gericht Friedrich Nietzsches Matthes amp Seitz Berlin 2007 ISBN 978 3882218879 Conversations with Eric Voegelin Mitschrift von vier Vorlesungen in Montreal in den Jahren 1965 1967 1970 1976 Thomas More Institute Montreal 1980 Briefwechsel 1939 1949 Eric Voegelin und Hermann Broch In Sinn und Form Heft 2 2008 S 149 174 Briefwechsel Eric Voegelin und Karl Lowith In Sinn und Form Heft 6 2007 S 764 794 Realitatsfinsternis Ubers Dora Fischer Barnicol Hg und Nachwort Peter J Opitz Matthes amp Seitz Berlin 2010 ISBN 978 3882216967 Was ist Geschichte Ubers Dora Fischer Barnicol Hg und Vorwort Peter J Opitz Matthes amp Seitz Berlin 2015 ISBN 978 3882210460 Glaube und Wissen Der Briefwechsel zwischen Eric Voegelin und Leo Strauss von 1934 bis 1964 Hg Peter J Opitz Wilhelm Fink Munchen 2010 ISBN 978 3770549672 Luther und Calvin Die grosse Verwirrung Hg Peter J Opitz Wilhelm Fink Munchen 2011 ISBN 978 3770551590 Die Natur des Rechts Ubers und Nachwort Thomas Nawrath Matthes amp Seitz Berlin Berlin 2012 ISBN 978 3882216172RezensionDie Ursprunge des Totalitarismus Rezension zu Arendts Totalitarismus Buch in Uber den Totalitarismus Texte Hannah Arendts aus den Jahren 1951 und 1953 S 33 42 Ubers Ursula Ludz Hg Ingeborg Nordmann HAIT Dresden 1998 ISBN 3931648176 27 The Collected Works of Eric VoegelinVolume 1 On the Form of the American Mind edited by Jurgen Gebhardt and Barry Cooper Volume 2 Race and State edited by Klaus Vondung Volume 3 The History of the Race Idea From Ray to Carus edited by Klaus Vondung Volume 4 The Authoritarian State An Essay on the Problem of the Austrian State edited by Gilbert Weiss Volume 5 Modernity without Restraint The Political Religions The New Science of Politics and Science Politics and Gnosticism edited by Manfred Henningsen Volume 6 Anamnesis On the Theory of History and Politics edited by David Walsh Volume 7 Published Essays 1922 1928 Edited by Thomas W Heilke and John von Heyking Volume 8 Published Essays 1929 1933 edited by Thomas W Heilke and John von Heyking Volume 9 Published Essays 1934 1939 edited by Thomas W Heilke Volume 10 Published Essays 1940 1952 edited by Ellis Sandoz Volume 11 Published Essays 1953 1965 edited by Ellis Sandoz Volume 12 Published Essays 1966 1985 edited by Ellis Sandoz Volume 13 Selected Book Reviews edited by Jodi Cockerill and Barry Cooper Volume 14 Order and History Volume I Israel and Revelation edited by Maurice P Hogan Volume 15 Order and History Volume II The World of the Polis edited by Athanasios Moulakis Volume 16 Order and History Volume III Plato and Aristotle edited by Dante Germino Volume 17 Order and History Volume IV The Ecumenic Age edited by Michael Franz Volume 18 Order and History Volume V In Search of Order edited by Ellis Sandoz Volume 19 History of Political Ideas Volume I Hellenism Rome and Early Christianity edited by Athanisios Moulakis Volume 20 History of Political Ideas Volume II The Middle Ages to Aquinas edited by Peter von Sivers Volume 21 History of Political Ideas Volume III The Later Middle Ages edited by David Walsh Volume 22 History of Political Ideas Volume IV Renaissance and Reformation edited by David L Morse and William M Thompson Volume 23 History of Political Ideas Volume V Religion and the Rise of Modernity edited by James L Wiser Volume 24 History of Political Ideas Volume VI Revolution and the New Science edited by Barry Cooper Volume 25 History of Political Ideas Volume VII The New Order and Last Orientation edited by Jurgen Gebhardt and Thomas A Hollweck Volume 26 History of Political Ideas Volume VIII Crisis and the Apocalypse of Man edited by David Walsh Volume 27 Nature of the Law and Related Legal Writings edited by Robert Anthony Pascal James Lee Babin and John William Corrington Volume 28 What Is History And Other Late Unpublished Writings edited by Thomas A Hollweck and Paul Caringella Volume 29 Selected Correspondence 1924 1949 edited with an introduction by Thomas Hollweck Volume 30 Selected Correspondence 1950 1984 edited with an introduction by Thomas Hollweck Volume 31 Hitler and the Germans edited by Detlev Clemens and Brendan Purcell Volume 32 The Theory of Governance and Other Miscellaneous Papers 1921 1938 edited by William Petropulos and Gilbert Weiss Volume 33 The Drama of Humanity and Other Miscellaneous Papers 1939 1985 edited by William Petropulos and Gilbert Weiss Volume 34 Autobiographical Reflections Revised Edition with a Voegelin Glossary and Cumulative Index edited with introductions by Ellis SandozSee also EditLeo StraussReferences Edit David R Cole The Political Philosophy of Eric Voegelin and His Followers Edwin Mellen Press 2008 p iv Christian Dambock ed Influences on the Aufbau Springer 2015 p 258 Eric Voegelin Reason The Classic Experience in Voegelin Published Essays 1966 1985 vol 12 of The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin ed Ellis Sandoz Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1990 289 290 Order and History Volume IV The Ecumenic Age vol 17 of The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin ed Michael Franz Columbia MO University of Missouri Press 2000 408 Professor Bruno Latour s Lecture on Politics and Religion A Reading of Eric Voegelin Bruno Latour s lecture on politics and religion July 27 2015 Archived from the original on August 16 2018 Retrieved March 15 2018 Szakolczai Arpad January 25 2013 Eric Voegelin and Alfred Schutz A Friendship That Lasted a Lifetime VoegelinView Archived from the original on October 4 2020 Retrieved September 9 2015 Federici Michael Eric Voegelin The Restoration of Order ISI Books 2002 p 1 Distinguished members PDF The Philadelphia society archived from the original PDF on January 18 2012 a b Ellis Sandoz Eric Voegelin January 3 1901 January 19 1985 Political Science Reviewer 16 1986 McDonald Marci October 2004 The Man Behind Stephen Harper The Walrus CA Archived from the original on November 7 2014 Retrieved January 18 2013 Thomas J J Altizer A New History and a New But Ancient God A Review Essay Journal of the American Academy of Religion 1975 Vol XLIII Iss 4 Archived from the original on 9 December 2021 on the Wayback Machine Webb 1981 p 282 According to Voegelin the claim to gnosis may take intellectual emotional and volitional forms Webb 1981 p 282 A type of thinking that claims absolute cognitive mastery of reality Relying as it does on a claim to gnosis gnosticism considers its knowledge not subject to criticism As a religious or quasi religious movement gnosticism may take transcendentalizing as in the case of the Gnostic movement of late antiquity or immanentizing forms as in the case of Marxism Webb 1981 282 Voegelin Eric 1989 Sandoz Ellis Weiss Gilbert Petropoulos William eds The Collected Works Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 80711826 5 Buckley Jr William F Cancel Your Own Goddam Subscription Notes amp Asides from National Review Basic Books 2007 pp 23 24 Voegelin 1987 p 120 Voegelin 1987 chap 4 Voegelin Eric The ecumenic age order amp History vol 4 esp Introduction amp chap 5 Voegelin Eric 2000 Franz Michael ed The collected works vol 17 University of Missouri Press In Search of the Ground Published Essays 1953 1965 p 239 Collected Works Vol 11 Brendan Purcell February 17 2009 The Irish Dialogue with Eric Voegelin Voegelin View Archived from the original on July 15 2018 Retrieved July 15 2018 a b Webb 2005 Voegelin Eric 1987 The new science of politics an introduction pbk Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 128ff 173ffn ISBN 978 0 22686114 2 OCLC 16992786 Archived from the original on January 20 2023 Retrieved December 21 2022 Hans Kelsen April 2017 Secular Religion A Polemic against the Misinterpretation of Modern Social Philosophy Science and Politics as New Religions Walter Robert Jabloner Clemens Zeleny Klaus 2 Auflage ed Stuttgart Franz Steinerm ISBN 978 3 51511760 9 OCLC 988613915 Jabloner Clemens 2013 Secular religion Rezeption und Kritik von Hans Kelsens Auseinandersetzung mit Religion und Wissenschaft Wien Manz pp 19 42 ISBN 9783214147556 OCLC 864572584 Kelsen Hans Voegelin Eric 2004 Arnold Eckhart ed A new science of politics Hans Kelsen s reply to Eric Voegelin s New science of politics a contribution to the critique of ideology Frankfurt Ontos Verlag p 107 ISBN 978 3 11032737 3 OCLC 607253659 geplant Wien 1938 Nach der Besetzung Osterreichs durch die Deutschen in der schwedischen Firmen Neugrundung erschienen Im Inhaltsverzeichnis ist Voegelins Originaltext nicht explizit genannt sondern er steht lediglich unter einem summarischen Titel der Hg in Drei Teile auf deutsch die Rezension selbst Eine Antwort Arendts S 42 51 und eine Abschliessende Bemerkung Voegelins S 51f In einem Schluss Kommentar geht die Hg in auf die Unterschiede der beiden ein Die Originaltexte zuerst in Englisch E V The origins of totalitarism in Review of Politics Hg University of Notre Dame South Bend IN Jg 15 H 1 1953 pp 68 76 sowie Arendt A reply pp 76 84 und Voegelin Concluding remarks pp 84s Alle drei Teile auch im Reprint Sammelband The crisis of modern times Perspectives from the Review of Politics 1939 1962 Verlag wie das Heft 2007 ISBN 0268035067 E V pp 272 280 Arendt pp 280 287 E V pp 287 289Further reading EditPrimary literature Edit All of Voegelin s writing is published as his Collected Works CW reviewed by Mark Lilla Mr Casaubon in America The New York Review of Books 54 11 June 28 2007 29 31 Primary sources Edit The closest to an introduction to his thought in his own words is the Autobiographical Reflections Wagner Gerhard Weiss Gilbert eds 2011 A Friendship That Lasted a Lifetime The Correspondence Between Alfred Schutz and Eric Voegelin Petropulos William transl University of Missouri Press 240 pp Register of the Eric Voegelin papers 1901 1997 at the Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford CA 2012 120 PDFs Secondary literature Edit Cooper Barry Eric Voegelin and the Foundations of Modern Political Science University of Missouri Press 1999 Hund Wulf D The Racism of Eric Voegelin In Journal of World Philosophies 4 2019 2 pp 1 22 Federici Michael Eric Voegelin The Restoration of Order ISI Books 2002 basic introduction McAllister Ted V Leo Strauss Eric Voegelin and The Search for a Postliberal Order University Press of Kansas 1995 Sandoz Ellis The Voegelinian Revolution A Biographical Introduction Louisiana State UP 1981 advanced Trepanier Lee and Steven F McGuire eds Eric Voegelin and the Continental Tradition Explorations in Modern Political Thought University of Missouri Press 2011 284 pp essays on his relationship to Hegel Schelling Kierkegaard Heidegger and Gadamer Webb Eugene 1981 Glossary of Voegelin terms online p 282 According to Voegelin the claim to gnosis may take intellectual emotional and volitional forms Webb Eugene Eric Voegelin Philosopher of History University of Washington Press 1981 2005 Voegelin s Gnosticism Reconsidered Political Science Reviewer 34 External links Edit Quotations related to Eric Voegelin at Wikiquote Works by or about Eric Voegelin at Internet Archive Eric Voegelin papers at the Hoover Institution Archives Eric Voegelin Archiv The Eric Voegelin Institute LSU The Centre of Eric Voegelin Studies EVS Ghent University Eric Voegelin Study Page Brief Excerpts from Eric Voegelin s Works Stephen Mcknight Gnosticism and Modernity Voegelin s Reconsiderations Twenty Years After The New Science of Politics Intellectual Conservatives Greatest Works No 23 Archived September 25 2017 at the Wayback Machine The suggestion of pneumopathological consciousness as the proper term of Voegelin s intended Gnosticism Voegelin Research News Eric Voegelin Bibliothek at FAU Erlangen Nurnberg Eric Voegelin Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eric Voegelin amp oldid 1145432112, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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