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Schmitt v. (?) Kelsen: The Total State of Exception Posited for the Total Regulation of Life Cover

Schmitt v. (?) Kelsen: The Total State of Exception Posited for the Total Regulation of Life

By: Tomas Berkmanas  
Open Access
|Jan 2011

Abstract

Firstly, the article focuses on the ideologies of Hans Kelsen and Carl Schmitt, which are, as a matter of stereotype, considered as being in opposition to each other. By revealing the logics of Kelsenian normativism and the conception of law presupposed therein, the paper aims at re-constructing the opposition into a generative affinity of two ideologies and showing that these two great ideological adversaries of the first half of the twentieth century could be considered co-authors of the same ideological construct. The construct could be called the total state of exception, with the inherent political holism and legal nihilism.

The second main aim of the article is to widen the scope of this insight by relating it to the applied ideas that frame our modern political world. The ideas are those of democracy and human rights, the former appearing as the form of the total state, the latter as the one possible de-former of the total state. However, the foundation - i.e. natural law - of the de-former appears to be inconceivable and, therefore, lost to the modern mind. In the end, the article attempts to show that Schmitt might have reflected on this much more fundamental aspect of legal nihilism. This reflection provides for the possibility of dissonances in his basically anthropocentric decisionism and the centralization of the problem of natural law.

Language: English
Page range: 98 - 118
Published on: Jan 28, 2011
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2011 Tomas Berkmanas, published by Faculty of Political Science and Diplomacy and the Faculty of Law of Vytautas Magnus University (Lithuania)
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.

Volume 3 (2010): Issue 2 (December 2010)