subject

You are currently browsing articles tagged subject.

Velazquez The Forge of Vulcan

A double contract is issued, horizontal among individuals, and vertical with the sovereign, transforming the former into subject and citizen. Still the simple dissolution of one of the contract’s extremes did not imply the resolution of the other. The sovereign could not be deposed by the people, he remained absolute; the institution was irrevocable. The moment of the covenant was conceived subtly enough not to admit any real constitution of the aggregate of men as a persona, as an actual body, impeding the conformation of an incipient democracy. The transfer of rights had to be done en masse. The two axis were constituted simultaneously, the individuals (horizontal), and the sovereign (vertical). After the vertical institution the gathering of individuals disappeared and became a tumult, there was no constitutive body, no way back.

The individual was incarnated in relation to other men that did not belong any more to his kinship or family, to any common lord or fiefdom, but that agreed with each other, by means if their express will, for their personal interest as independent moral actors. The individual was created ex suppositio, tacitly, preceding the pattern of the sovereign’s institution.

The foundation of the state, apparently a simple device in the administration of power, entailed the causation of two personae, “and he that carrieth this person, is called SOVEREIGN, and said to have sovereign power; and every one besides, his SUBJECT.”(1) The institution of the state was the relational composition of a sovereign and a concrete socialized being that was subjected to this novel power and took part in the establishment of a new social arrangement where all men, independently from their rank, position, or wealth, recognized each other both as apt members and founders of a social agreement, of a commonwealth.

(1) Leviathan II, 17, 14.

Tags: , , ,

The increasing importance of biography in relation to individuality is an indicator of difference and the assertion thereof. In this context, Luckmann highlights the augmenting number of roles men play daily but their simultaneous anonymity, their impersonal character.(1) Maffesoli vindicates the person and their roles, submerged in sentiments and feelings, as a post-modern category in relation to the mechanical, functional, individual.(2) In this sense, tribalism is marked by the sharing of common sentiments, their ephemeral character, the externality to the self, partaker in order to ‘be with’ rather than in the search for any project or ideal. Only an aesthetics of emotion redounds in an ethical connection and increases networks based on intensity, on a passionate rather than on a traditional, mechanical, social or political order.

The intersection of social conceptions and epistemology suppose both an individual that is subject of knowledge, and a series of individual objects that can be known. Their existence is verified by the application of the principle of manipulation and production. Individual is a way of being constituted as well as a way of understanding, of referring to the world. A definition of individualism implies not only an ontology, but also an epistemology.(3) The relation between individualism as a social conception and a certain outlook on nature can be tracked down to the beginnings of modernity and its resilient orography.

Friedenthal shows the coalescence of natural science and the conceptions of man and society. The various interrelations between social theory and natural philosophy stood at the base of the prevalence of Newton’s system in front of Leibniz’s ideas.(4) The congruence of both social and natural thought, their consistent configuration in a plane of construction, the common metaphors, based on philosophical assumptions, paved the way to their ultimate acceptance. Prejudices and beliefs, inserted in theoretical constructs, philosophical concepts that underlie diverse disciplines, do not only influence their elaboration but determine their ultimate acceptance and composition within the society’s tissue of credence, the roaming on a plain of consistence producing the conditions of possibility of a judgement, the acknowledgement by others of their righteousness, producing attitudes towards concepts and sustaining forms of power.

(1) T. Luckmann, “Persönliche Identität und Lebenslauf -gesellschaftliche Voraussetzungen”, H.G. Bruse and B. Hildenbrand (eds.) Vom Ende des Individuums zur Individualität ohne Ende, Opladen, 1988.
(2) “The rational era is built on the principle of individuation and of separation, whereas the empathetic period is marked by the lack of differentiation, the ‘loss’ in a collective subject, in other words what I shall call neo-tribalism…” M. Maffesoli, The Time of the Tribes. The Decline of Individualism in Mass Society, London, 1996. In this sense the individual loses his autonomy. “Each social actor is less acting than acted upon,” p. 145.
(3) Cf. D. Shanahan, Towards a Genealogy of Individualism, Massachusetts, 1992 defines thus the concept of individuality he traces historically. “For the purposes of this study, we will consider individualism as that system of beliefs in which the individual is not only given direct status and value but become the final arbiter of truth,” p. 20. An interactive understanding of consciousness could produce a final criticism to the notion of individual.
(4) G. Friedenthal, Atom und Individuum im Zeitalter Newtons. Zur Genese der mechanistischen Natur- und Sozialphilosophie, Frankfurt, 1982. The author stresses the influence of the English philosophia prima in Newton’s concept of absolute space and the necessity of the existence of particles in the void. Actually Leibniz’s and Newton’s systems were equally apt theories, the latter’s accommodation to society grounded its ulterior success. “Es handelt sich also nicht kaum, dass ein naturphilosophischer Untersuchungsgegenstand einer sozialphilosophischen ‘Denkform’ entsprechend modelliert worden wäre, sondern darum, dass in beiden Bereichen die gleiche Untersuchungsmethode angewendet wurde, der derselbe philosophische Grundsatz über das Verhältnis von Element und System zugrundelag.” p. 313. Cf. T.A. Spragens, “The politics of inertia and gravitation- The functions of exemplar paradigms in social thought”, Polity 5, 1972-3, pp. 288-310. Cf. S. Shapin and S. Schaffer, Leviathan and the Air Pump: Hobbes, Boyle and the Experimental Life, Princeton, 1986. The relation between a conception of nature and our place in it and their multifaceted implications is not only a question for anthropological or historical study, but also penetrates certain highly influential scientific topics. Thus if we understand nature as a self-regulating organism we become part of the larger enterprise of sustaining life on earth. M. Migdgley, “Individualism and the Concept of Gaia”, Review of International Studies 26, 2000, pp. 29-44. Cf. J.E. Lovelock, Gaia. A new outlook on nature, Oxford, 1979. Cf. I. Prigogine and I. Stengers, La nouvelle alliance. Métamorphoses de la science, Paris, 1979. On the other hand, some insist in the importance of selection and stress the competition among genes to persevere and become dominant in a population, R. Dawkins, op. cit.

Tags: , , ,