Jump to Navigation
Home

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Markets Map
  • Topics
  • Data
  • Comments
  • Images
  • Blog
  • About

Secondary menu

  • Latest News
  • Top Rated
  • Most Popular
  • Archive
  • Discussions
  • The Hottest Real Estate Markets On Earth
  • UN Says Worried Over N.Korea Missile Launch
  • Independent Scotland open to Cyprus-style bank risks,...
  • Kuwait replaces oil officials at KPC after $2.2 billion...
  • Wapping's pervasive paywall sets some ambitious...
  • Newsnight needs less of the night, more of the news
  • On Hong Kong Shelves, Illicit Dirt on China Elite
  • You can't be sure of seeing Shell's AGM
  • NABARD gives clean chit to co-operative banks
  • Air India's plan to trim workforce stuck with...

    China sentence of the day

    Fri, 12/24/2010 - 03:00 EDT - Marginal Revolution
    • books
    • Comments
    • Current Affairs
    • Philosophy
    • Political Science

    When my turn to talk about American politics came, and I tried to explain the Tea Party movement’s goal of “getting government off our backs,” I was met with blank stares and ironic smiles.
    The full article is here, possibly gated (TNR), by Mark Lilla.  It concerns the high and rising popularity of Leo Strauss and Carl Schmitt in China.  Another excerpt:
    Schmitt was by far the most intellectually challenging anti-liberal statist of the twentieth century. His deepest objections to liberalism were anthropological. Classical liberalism assumes the autonomy of self-sufficient individuals and treats conflict as a function of faulty social and institutional arrangements; rearrange those arrangements, and peace, prosperity, learning, and refinement will follow. Schmitt assumed the priority of conflict: Man is a political creature, in the sense that his most defining characteristic is the ability to distinguish friend and adversary. Classical liberalism sees society as having multiple, semi-autonomous spheres; Schmitt asserted the priority of the social whole (his ideal was the medieval Catholic Church) and considered the autonomy of the economy, say, or culture or religion, as a dangerous fiction...Schmitt saw sovereignty as the result of an arbitrary self-founding act by a leader, a party, a class, or a nation that simply declares “thus it shall be.” Classical liberalism had little to say about war and international affairs, leaving the impression that, if only human rights were respected and markets kept free, a morally universal and pacified world order would result. For Schmitt, this was liberalism’s greatest and most revealing intellectual abdication: If you have nothing to say about war, you have nothing to say about politics. There is, he wrote, “absolutely no liberal politics, only a liberal critique of politics.”
    Seth Roberts offers a Chinese economics joke.

    • Original article
    • Login or register to post comments
     

    Related

    • Is Hayek's Argument for Liberal Government Incoherent?

      |Peter Boettke|

    • Marxism, liberalism & social change

      Tim Worstall sets Marxists a puzzle: I’m agreeing with Marx that the great societal changes will only come when the objective material conditions allow them to be successful. And then here’s my confusion: how do we know, how can we know, when such is true?

    • Scholarship & A Free Society: A Report

      |Peter Boettke|

    • Notre Dame Public Intellectualism Conference: Mark Lilla and My Instant Reaction

      Mark Lilla: Caveat Lector:

    • Acting Secretary Blank Encourages Turkish Investment to Create American Jobs

      U.S. Acting Commerce Secretary Rebecca Blank visited Istanbul today to meet with U.S. and Turkish business leaders to advance commercial and trade relations between the United States and Turkey. This is the first visit to Turkey by a U.S. Commerce Secretary in 14 years. Acting Secretary Blank, along with U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, are leading a delegation of senior U.S. Government officials, including representatives from the Department of State, the Department of Energy, the U.S. Trade and Development Agency, U.S. Export-Import Bank and the National Security Staff. Throughout the meetings and events, Acting Secretary Blank highlighted President Obama and Prime Minister Erdogan's goal of elevating our commercial relationship with Turkey to the strategic level, contributing to the peace and prosperity of citizens of both countries and the world. Acting Secretary Blank and Ambassador Kirk met with U.S. companies that are active in the Turkish market to hear their views on the commercial environment in Turkey, and learn how the U.S. government can help grow their businesses, and support jobs and growth in Turkey and in the United States.

    • Edmund Burke and American Conservatism

      By James Kwak

    • Who are the Catholic economists?

      Gregory Barr asks me: Do you know of any prominent Catholic economists, either alive now or in the last century or so?  Say, in the top 200 economists or so.  It's not that I judge economists' ideas by their religion, but, as a Catholic, I am curious.  There may be some top-notch economists who are Catholic, but I don't know who they are.  Contrarily, I've actually heard of prominent Catholic scientists, philosophers, historians, etc.

    • Do Political Science Departments Ignore Conservatism?

      Peter Berkowitz offers some old whine in a slightly new bottle:

    • The Tea Party Has Always Been With Us

      There’s an enormous amount to like in John Judis’ broad historical and intellectual overview of the Tea Party phenomenon. That said, I thought his conclusion was a bit at odds with the main thrust of the analysis:

    • Liberalism and Truth

      |Peter Boettke|

    Latest

    Seth Meyers Knocked Out Anderson Cooper On Saturday Night Live
    Seth Meyers Knocked Out Anderson Cooper On...
    Here's How A Successful Lawyer Knew For Sure She Was A Sociopath
    Here's How A Successful Lawyer Knew For Sure...

    User login

    • Create new account
    • Request new password
    • Click on the icon to sign in with your social network login or enter your Bullfax.com login

    Our Blog

    • Aviva steps up drive for cost cuts
    • Food Demand, JM Financial, UK Startups Incubator and Sina in Our News for Today 05/17/2013
    • Budget black hole at heart of George Osborne’s finances

    Markets Map

    Markets Map

    Follow Us

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS
    S&P 500: 1667.47 1.02% FTSE: 6723.06 0.52% Nikk.: 15138.12 0.67% DAX: 8398.00 0.33% HSI: 23082.68 0.17% FX: EUR/GBP: 1.1821 USD/EUR: 1.2833 JPY/USD: 103.165 Commodities: Gold: 1360.15

    Bullfax.com - Market News & Analysis 2008-2011
    Contact Us | About Us | Terms & Conditions

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS .

    Secondary menu

    • Latest News
    • Top Rated
    • Most Popular
    • Archive
    • Discussions