The Nature of State in Schopenhauer's Political Thought

Opinion on the concept of state has a deep root in the history of western political thought. Although there have been brief and marginal studies in this area in ancient Greece, we notice more attention to the concept of state and its coordinates since the Renaissance. Germany, during eighteenth cent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Faṣlnāmah-i dawlatʹpizhūhī 2020-01, Vol.5 (20), p.221-250
Hauptverfasser: Somaye Hamidi, Hashem Ghaderi
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Sprache:per
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Zusammenfassung:Opinion on the concept of state has a deep root in the history of western political thought. Although there have been brief and marginal studies in this area in ancient Greece, we notice more attention to the concept of state and its coordinates since the Renaissance. Germany, during eighteenth century, is one of the most important arenas on this concept. As one of its thinkers and contemporary of Hegel, Schopenhauer has also paid attention to the issue of state during his discussions. The problem of the present study is the nature of state in Schopenhauer's political thought. The hypothesis of the present paper is that Schopenhauer's theory of state as opposed to Hegelian thought, rejects the totalitarian and the Hegelian ideal state on one hand, and, based on the rule of the concept of evil and how he views metaphysics in its philosophical apparatus on the other hand, takes on a minimalist and protective nature.
ISSN:2476-6828
2476-6828
DOI:10.22054/TSSQ.2020.10927