Max Weber and the End of the ‘Metaphysics of State’
Abstract
:‘Ich habe stets den alten Auspruch für weise gehalten, man müsse die menschlichen Dinge nicht beweinen, nicht belachen, mann müsse sie zu verstehen trachten’.1Dalhmann, Die Politik.
1. Introduction
2. Roscher, Hintze, and Jellinek
3. Jellinek and Weber
4. Treitschke and Weber
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | ‘I have always wisely taken the old expression that one must not cry about or laugh at human things, but one must strive to understand them’. |
2 | This metaphysical doctrine remained dominate until Kant and, as Nietzsche has shown, it continued to be persuasive until the rise of positivism. However, it was not until Nietzsche’s final destruction of the ‘metaphysics of being’ that a totally new doctrine could arise—Nietzsche’s own ‘Zarathustra’. See Nietzsche’s ‚Wie die ‘wahre Welt’ endlich zur Fabel wurde. Geschichte eines Irrtums’. In (Nietzsche 1988, pp. 80–81). |
3 | F.G. Dahlmann wrote that the idealist was misguided in the attempt to determine the best state without regard to time and place; rather only through the use of history can one gain a healthy understanding of politics (Dahlmann [1835] 1847, pp. 7–8). In his ‘Einleitung’ to Weber’s last lecture course Gangolf Hübinger noted that Dahlman’s lectures at Göttingen and Treitschke’s at Berlin were the most influential of the lectures on politics in Germany (Weber 2009, p. 5). |
4 | As Kari Palonen has recently noted, most scholars believe that Weber shared a similar frame work regarding contemporary discussions about the state. Palonen is right to insist that this shared view is incorrect and that Weber intended to break with those contemporary views. Palonen’s primary focus is on Weber’s notion of ‘Chance’; mine is on Weber’s larger view of the state (Palonen 2011, p. 100). |
5 | Both Roscher and Treitschke were Jellinek’s teachers. See (Anter 2004, p. 38). |
6 | One reviewer suggested that this account should include Hegel. The reviewer is certainly correct that Hegel’s concept of state would belong in any complete account of the metaphysics of state. However, I began with the thinkers at the end of the nineteenth century in order to maintain the focus of this essay and to keep it within a manageable length. |
7 | While Jens Kersten noted that this work is still fascinating and he recognizes Weber’s positive reaction to it, he stresses the methodological over the political and he minimizes Jellinek’s emphasis on bringing about fundamental legal changes by political means (Kersten 2000, pp. 206–11). In contrast, Duncan Kelly suggests that this small work exerted considerable influence on Weber’s political thinking (Kelly 2003, p. 95). |
8 | In his Pro-Rector’s lecture at Heidelberg the following year Jellinek spoke about the struggle between old and new laws and he insisted that this was not some minor difference between legal interpretations, but was the momentous struggle between conflicting ideas and principles. And, he likened it to the struggle between new and old gods (Jellinek 1907b, 396–97). |
9 | (Weber 1990, p. 311) and see the editorial comments on Weber’s letter. Gustav Schmoller had begun this exchange by maintaining that Germany was ill-suited to be a true parliamentary system; Alfred Weber countered that it was, and then Jellinek weighed in with his opinion that Germany needed to decide whether it should be a ‘single’ state or a ‘union’. See Jellinek’s ‘Bundestaat und parlamentarische Regierung’, (Jellinek 1907a, p. 446). |
10 | Kelly notes that Jellinek was still preoccupied with the search for ‘the best type of state’, ‘in the manner of classical Greek political theory’ (Kelly 2003, p. 95). |
11 | Towards the end of his life Treitschke made this point abundantly clear when he wrote that the true historian is always concerned foremost with culture, and he invoked Thucydides as one of the first and most important examples (von Treitschke 1895, pp. 789–90). |
12 | Numerous German Catholics disapproved of the Papal decree; these were referred to as ‘Old Catholics’ (‘Altkatholiken’). However, they tended to be conservative Catholics in every other way and Bismarck did not believe that they would be a helpful political force. See (Schmidt-Volkmar 1962, pp. 68–69). |
13 | (von Treitschke 1898, p. 259). Compare with what Weber says in Wissenschaft als Beruf: with ‘few exceptions’ it is not number one or even number two who is nominated, but number three (Weber 1992, p. 76). |
14 | (von Treitschke 1898, p. 340). In the first volume Treitschke talked of German Idealism, but he noted that it was unlike the French with their ‘crazy books about eternal peace’. (von Treitschke 1897, p. 76). Compare Weber’s derisive comments about peace and happiness in his Inaugural Lecture (Weber 1993, pp. 558–60, 572). |
15 | (von Treitschke 1897, p. 269). Freedom was to Treitschke as it was to Weber. For both, it was personal freedom and the freedom to develop one’s own talents. See Treitschke’s 1861 essay ‘Die Freiheit’ (von Treitschke 1907, pp. 24, 30, 41). Honor was also crucial to both—and both honored the great German general von Molke. See the speech ‘Zum Gedächtnis des großen Krieges’ that Treitschke delivered in Berlin in 1895 (von Treitschke 1907, pp. 320–21). |
16 | (Weber 1934, pp. 174–75). In the Foreword to the second edition of his biography of Treitschke’s early career Walter Bussman notes Treitschke’s ‘unheilvolle Wirkung’ that he had on the political and social views of his students. (‘Unheilvolle’ can mean ‘unholy’ but it also can mean ‘unwholesome’ or even ‘unhealthy’). Bussman quotes from the Introduction to the 1916 English translation of Politik that ‘The disciples of a political thinker habitually carry his doctrines farther than the master himself; and that is the case with von Treitschke’ (Bussman [1952] 1981, pp. XVIII–XIX). |
17 | In his article ‘Politische Führung und Verantwortung in der Demokratie’ Nevil Johnson suggests that the subject of political leadership belongs in the realm of the ‘will’ rather than ‘reason’ for three reasons, but the most important one is that it resists precision and empirical objectivity. While Johnson does not say so, this suggests that the subject of political leadership is not part of any ‘political science’ (Johnson 1988, p. 386). |
18 | (Weber 1988, pp. 366, 417–19, 424). Despite having lost the war and becoming the ‘pariah land on earth’ Weber believed that Germany could rise once again. Treitschke had written that despite its age, Germany had twice experienced its youth: its original period of youth and then again, the time after the Thirty Years War (von Treitschke 1927, Band 1: 3). |
19 | See (Hennis 2003, esp. 3–52). There Hennis insists that Thucydides was a political scientist, but was not a political philosopher. Further, all political philosophy is a footnote to Plato, but all political science is in the tradition of Thucydides. (Hennis 2003, p. 51). For Weber’s estimation of and his indebtedness to Pericles, see (Adair-Toteff 2007). |
20 | The ‘antipodes’ Hans Kelsen and Carl Schmitt developed Weber’s political thinking in divergent ways: Kelsen built upon Weber’s legal formalism and continued his separation between fact and value. In contrast, Schmitt adapted Weber’s ideas about political legitimacy and blurred the lines between facts and judgments. While Kelsen defended law and liberalism, Schmitt was a critic of both. |
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Adair-Toteff, C. Max Weber and the End of the ‘Metaphysics of State’. Histories 2022, 2, 185-196. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030015
Adair-Toteff C. Max Weber and the End of the ‘Metaphysics of State’. Histories. 2022; 2(3):185-196. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030015
Chicago/Turabian StyleAdair-Toteff, Christopher. 2022. "Max Weber and the End of the ‘Metaphysics of State’" Histories 2, no. 3: 185-196. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030015
APA StyleAdair-Toteff, C. (2022). Max Weber and the End of the ‘Metaphysics of State’. Histories, 2(3), 185-196. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030015