SINISTER WISDOM
Carl Schmitt was one of those brilliant German intellectuals who, in the anti-democratic traditions of elite European authoritarianism and illiberalism, lent their prestige and moral authority to Fascism. Like his contemporary, the philosopher Martin Heidegger, Schmitt became an enthusiastic Nazi and an academic bully. Unlike Heidegger, who in his malice or dotage fellated the radical New Left, Schmitt never recanted his National Socialist past.
That being said, Schmitt’s deep learning and insights about the state, the struggle for power and war should not be ignored lightly because of his wicked politics any more than we should eschew learning from the writings of Mao ZeDong, Franz Fanon or Sayyid Qtub. Only a fool ignores the ideas of the enemy.
With that caveat, I recommend Schmitt’s “ The Theory of The Partisan“.
A major hat tip to my friend and fellow blogger Marc Schulman who I suspect unearthed this link in his own research into Alexandre Kojeve.
May 11th, 2007 at 10:28 pm
Scott Horton has written a few pieces about Carl Schmitt’s influence on today’s political environment. Here’s one:
http://balkin.blogspot.com/2006/10/carl-schmitt-and-military-commissions_16.html
May 11th, 2007 at 11:35 pm
Haven’t read the link yet…but for some reason I’m scared about what I might find…oh well, here goes.
Barnabus