Appendix-113 Eng
Appendix-113 Eng
Appendix-113 Eng
Content Writers
Shalini Singh, Mitalee Mahapatra,
Divyangna Sharma, Meena Kumari,
Published by:
Department of Distance and Continuing Education under
the aegis of Campus of Open Learning, University of Delhi
Printed by:
School of Open Learning, University of Delhi
Understanding Political Theory
Table of Contents
Unit 1
WHAT IS POLITICS: THEORIZING THE ‘POLITICAL’
Shalini Singh
Assistant Professor
Janki Devi Memorial College
University of Delhi
STRUCTURE
1.2 INTRODUCTION
Politics is used as the science and art of Government. It deals with the issue of public affairs
and governance. Two words that are used in correlation with the word and are also
instrumental in shaping the meaning of the world are government and public affairs. The two
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in turn are themselves related, where the government has to deal with the public affairs. This
understanding is a very broad notion and does not give a concrete and compartmentalized
understanding of the word politics. Politics as a term has been widely discussed and debated
upon. A common understanding of ‘What is Politics’ has not been agreed upon. However, it
is a realm that has been understood in some way or the other, by every individual. One cannot
be devoid of an opinion on the essence of what is actually politics? There can be diverse
opinions and often opinions that are at loggerheads, but by the essence of being a human, one
is bound to think about the realm of politics. The expanse of politics is wide and can range
from one’s existence, to its nature of being a human, a social being, and a political creature.
The expanse goes beyond the virtue of existence to one’s social and political identity.
Politics has been defined by various scholars. Harold J Laswell defines Politics as the idea of
Who gets what, when and how? His idea advocates the rights of citizens and institutional
procedure of the state in granting the rights of the people. David Easton describes Politics as
the ‘authoritative allocation of values for a society’. His conception of values talks about a set
of values that is broadly agreed upon by the state to adhere to. The idea of core values that
guide the state is inherent in the idea of politics. The idea of value, Easton talks about can be
anything that is valued by the society, ideology, goal, social ranking or any core essence that
is deemed as the benchmark for carrying out governance. The term value is a dependent
variable and can be allocated a character as per the requirements, demand or preferences.
Bernard Crick defines politics as a distinctive form of rule where people come together
through institutional mechanism to deliberate and resolve differences to articulate public
policy for the common good. The proposition of Bernard Crick, lays emphasis on the idea of
reconciliation, bargaining and shared understanding. The culmination of the aforesaid
understanding is manifested in the policies formulated by the State. Seemingly, Politics
comes across as an idea that falls within the juxtaposition of state and society. The state often
resonates with the government and the society with the group of individuals. The two are
linked by the idea of governance, which in turn is linked by the aspects of politics. However,
the idea of politics disintegrates the basic concept of State and Society. The cardinal
distinction between the two is usually overlooked and draws one’s attention to the
relationship between the two that in turn underlines the realm of political. As per the
distinction, the intra state affairs fall under the ambit of politics, but the intra-societal affairs
that are concerned with the sanction of reallocation and legitimation of power are extraneous
to the idea of Politics. What is Politics is often defined by a null hypothesis. It is the absence
of a variable that validates the presence of the politics.
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state and avail his rights. However, citizenship is not a precondition for being contributing to
the social enrichment of a group of people. Not every section of the society was citizen of
Aristotle’s State, but everyone did imbibe a sense of belonging to the land they inhabited.
The discourse on nationalism has blurred the boundaries between social and political. The
discourse of Nation and State in itself a question of social and political. Nation is the feeling
of belongingness. It has the element of race, religion, ethnicity, caste. It is submerging of
identities in a unanimous umbrella of Nation, whereas State is the territorial boundary bound
by an authority of Government. Nationalism as an idea takes the orientation of a state towards
that of a community where the individuals are united by a bond of togetherness and knit by a
sense of belongingness to a common set of beliefs and ideas. The more the state expands its
realm of functions and takes over the attributes of a voluntary association like a community
or a family, the weaker the society will become (Etzioni, 2003). The difference between
citizenship and membership can be demarcated and realized if an analogy is drawn between
the relationship of a state-society and state-individual.
The difference between the social and political, if built upon leads to a larger dialogue in the
society culminating into social welfare policies. Public policies that go beyond the
administrative concerns, and provide a safety-net to the people by being a benefactor of the
marginalized, downtrodden and weaker sections of the society. This idea of reaggregation
and convergence of interest of individuals has been brought forth by Bernard Crick, in his
famous work ‘In Defense of Politics’. The idea of policy making actualizes the politics of the
state. Assimilating of the social context in the political underpinning, resulting in the
formulation of a public policy is the premise on which Crick has built up his idea of politics.
However, the demarcation between the social and political also indicates a line where the
distinction between the two is transgressed. The Political and social are distinct in its
orientation and approach but are reinstating condition for each other.
1.3.2 The Conception of Moral
Moral rests on the idea of conception of ‘good’. The idea of good is subjective but in the
moral paradigm, there is only universal good that forms the base of morality. The acceptance
that comes with the good is the idea of morality the state and society practice. If there is no
subjective good in morality, can the state and society be good at the same time or do they
differ in their orientation of good. Social Conservatives consider it as the prerogative of the
state to go beyond the idea of citizenship to inculcate social virtues to make a good society.
The state harbors the potential to regulate the human behavior, and bring out a moderation in
the attributes of an individual. The people are self-indulgent by nature and have a tendency to
exploit their liberty and become insensitive towards the needs of others. A belief that has
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been endorsed by social conservatives is the need of a ‘strong national government’ that will
mould the attributes of an individual and counterbalance the weaker aspect of the citizens.
(Brooks/Kristal 1997). The idea of virtuous behavior has come to be shaped by the state in
the conservative discourse.
A dilemma that comes across in the conception of good is also prevalent in the idea of a good
law-abiding citizen and a good person in general. Social Conservatives view the state as an
institution, that imparts the orientation of being good to its subjects. The idea of ‘good state’
does not focus on containing the state to undermine individual liberty. Communitarians
perceive society as an agency of promoting moral behavior. The conduct morally good
behavior goes beyond the stipulated permissibility of an agency, into the personal realm. The
moral attribute of behavior transcends beyond the apparatus of state. It moves beyond the
fiduciary relationship of state and its citizens, to a relationship of trust, harmony and
camaraderie between the members of the state. Societal orientation of a just and equitable
society, where not the state but the citizens extend their hand to the weak, vulnerable and
deprived sections of the society. The good society, reaches the private realm but with only a
limited set of core values. It is not as expansive and holistic as in a liberal state or a
government centered society. The scope of good is limited and particular in the societal
perception of good. The formulations of good may differ in the outlook of political and
society respectively. However, what shapes the dynamics is that if there is a contestation
between the formulation, how is the gap counterbalanced in maintaining an unequivocal idea
of good.
1.3.3 The Political is Moral
Every political action has a moral underpinning. There are no political deliberations devoid of
moral pretext. The usage of ‘moral’ is related to a broad range of moral social values that are
imbibed in the normative considerations of justice and equality. The idea is not restricted to a
limited and personal understanding of morality. According to the Liberals understanding of
political theory, the ambit of morality should not pervade the realm of public and political.
The moral deliberations are more confined to the private realm. Liberals fear that the
intrusion of morality in the public domain can trigger a cultural war. The public arena falls in
the ambit of the State, where the orientation of state and the idea of politics should essentially
remain neutral. The endorsement of morality in the public forum is likely to be perceived as
coercion and propagation of shared values.
The conception of the extent of ‘neutrality’ and the essence of ‘autonomy’ of the state differs
among liberals. A section of liberals believes that individual virtues like critical thinking
upholds the merit of the state (Gutman, 1987). A counterpart of liberals also upholds the
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premise of what Isaiah Berlin followed, a limited set of values that are deliberated, discussed
and agreed upon in the public forum form an underlying idea of morality that the state
professes and propagates. For instance, Stealing, Rape and Murder being reprimanded in any
society. The nature of punishment however, can have a discrepancy in the acceptance by a
particular society. State can either believe in capital punishment, or it can be neutral about it.
Euthanasia or mercy killing is another issue that has been a point of contention and differs in
how the different states have perceived it. The most contemporary example of acceptance is
evident in the LGBT Rights, where different states have a different take in the various aspects
of the community. However, endorsing different values is not divided into watertight
compartments. Subscribing to divergent and irreconcilable values does not lead to a political
deadlock. Public Policy is formulated in accordance, to reconcile the difference of opinion
and adopt a middle path for optimum suitability.
Communitarians come from a vantage point that politics should rearticulate shared values and
understanding of morality. Contemporary politics of free and democracy societies rests on the
pillar of demand aggregation and articulation. The absence of broad consensus and common
ground of values, beliefs and demands leads to turmoil and discontent, as visible between
Jewish and Arabic citizen of Israel. The consensus between the communities in a state plays a
vital role in maintaining the peace and sanctity of a democracy. The reasons for conflict arise
from difference in opinion and the lack of consensus in the governing the different group of
citizens defined by their caste, class, caste, region and language. The law acts as a neutral
arbiter and acts as a conscience of the state apparatus by upholding the essence of morality.
The law can never be morally neutral but it has to be unbiased and wise in adjudicating the
matters of state. The law has to be neutral in terms of its preferences and affiliations. It does
not have to impose the will of majority on the populous but uphold the prerogative for a just
and equitable society.
1.3.4 The Political is the State
The question that arises is that are there two conceptions of morality, one for the society and
one for the state. If they are different, do they ever converge? What are the repercussions of
the differences? Which notion does the citizen abide by? Are there major differences between
the conception of a ‘good society’ and a ‘good state’? A good society harbours a moral voice,
where individuals have a sense of morality and behave in pro-social manner. The pro-social
sense can emanate from either an innate or an acquired sense of morality. An innate sense of
morality that arises from the virtue of being human. The role of parenting and education thus
play a pivotal role in shaping the moral attributes of an individual. Communitarians
emphasize on the fact that the idea of morality needs to reinforced, which comes from the
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environment in which an individual thrives. The validation and approval of humans, one
holds in great regard and is significantly attached to is of great reverence, thus community
acts as an agency that does not only harbours but also instils a value system. The significant
role is not only played by how the values are enforced but how the values are fostered.
As put forth by John Locke, man is a rational being, who can logically apply a deductive
reasoning and determine the sense of morality, that has been granted by God. Locke’s moral
rationalism is based on the empirical understanding of idea. He believes that human mind is a
tabula-rasa, it is the sensory understanding that builds up the idea of morality. We, as humans
construct complex moral proposition from the simplistic perception of what we imbibe and
perceive from our sensory and reflexive experiences. Locke has knit an interrelation between
reason and morality. According to Locke, the state of nature was pre-political but not pre-
moral. There was already a sense of morality that existed; thus, a political state needs to have
a basic conception of morality.
The point of intervention in understanding morality is to assess if there is a difference in what
the society considers as morality, what the state considers as morality and what an individual
considers as morality. There are contentions between compliance with moral voice and what
an individual truly wants by the virtue of his freedom and entitlement. If an individual
deserves to be free from state control, does he not deserve to be free from the social pressure
that emanates from the conceptualization of societal morality. This dilemma has been
discussed by Jon Stuart Mill, in his work On Liberty. The dealings of the society with the
individual can be understood by the way of compulsion and control, either in the form of
physical punishment or moral coercion that the state asserts. The morality that the state
endorses can differ for various sections. It can be manifested as the popular will, or the
dominant public opinion.
The multitude of numbers in a democracy has the power to coerce by the will of majority.
Public disapprobation leads to alienation and despair of the people whose demands have not
been assimilated (Tocqueville, 1991). However, the distinction lies in the force of coercion, a
state can be morally coercive but a community endorses internal moral voice that is not to be
feared but inculcated. The moral choice resonates with individual liberty and the free choice
of man. The internal moral choice is not different from the self. It is a part of one’s existence
and is borne from the roots of one’s being. It defines and shapes one’s moral character. The
external moral choice is community driven and is imbibe from the societal orientation and
construct of ‘good’ and ‘bad’. The external moral choice lays the onus on an individual to
select or reject the moral construct being advocated. The final call is with the individual
acting. Society has the tendency to cajole, persuade and censure but it is up to the individual
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policies are deemed to be rational choice of the policy makers to voice the concerns of the
citizens in the public forum. It is perceived as a reasoned outcome for resolving the political
conflict (Johnson, 1994). Deliberations and democracy walk hand in hand and are vital for
upholding the moral conscience of the state. Moral dialogues engage the values of the
participant and deduce a rational and logical discourse for shaping a due course of action. The
entire process is substantive and not merely procedural. The values are not stagnant, they are
reorienting and adapting to the advent of time. A shared consensus is reached for adjudicating
the law and order of the state. The consensus is transformed into policies that form a part of
governance. The moral dialogues can pertain to deliberations about human rights, gender
rights, sexual harassment and other important discourses in democracy. The dialogues occur
at a preliminary level in the family, and then it follows at the level of community. How a
society comes together to renegotiate a renewed and reinvigorating set of values at various
levels determines the openness of the society. The deliberations occur in a chain reaction and
have the potential to lead a change in the perception of values. It starts in small groups across
millions of populations. The groups can be of a family, caste, religion, common ethnicity or
common language. The process is carried forward by interlinking of various such groups, that
transforms into shared public forums and think tanks. The chain of deliberations converts to a
wide-net by networking in the form of meetings at the regional and national levels. The
contemporary scenario has aided to the interconnectivity because of the world being knit by
digital infrastructure. The world is not only digital connected but the agendas of discussions
are digitally curated. Media has been instrumentally not only in voicing the opinion but also
discovering voices across sections of society.
The dialogues need not be orderly and precise focussing on a particular change, core value or
social intervention. It need not have a clear pattern or beginning, it only needs a dialogue to
trigger a discourse. An example of changing orientation of values is evident in the
environmental awareness across the continents in the contemporary world. The
environmental concern was not a part of the mainstream discourse. It had underlying issues
and concerns being raised by various individuals, groups and communities but was not
considered a shared core value in Western Societies. A nationwide megalogue was triggered
by the famous work on environment by Rachel Carson, named The Silent Spring. It was
further talked about at various forums and upheld by citizens as a prime cause of concern and
was included in the normative agenda. From the proclamation of Earth Day, observation of
Earth Overshoot Day to the various protocols and conventions on environment like the Kyoto
Protocol and Montreal Convention, the environmental degradation and control of Greenhouse
Gas Emissions has become an utmost concern across countries of the nation. The countries
often do not come to standard conclusion and have a difference of opinion in adhering to
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shared consensus on the measures to be taken. However, the differences do not differ from
the view that environmental concerns have become a shared core values that needs to be
included in the policy making. It is not just the legislative bodies that form a part of the
dialogue in case of established core values, but is undertaken as a distinct social process that
are nurtured in the social realm. The realm can fall under the political realm, but it certainly
has a deep and profound implication on the political discourse of the State.
The law is catalyst in achieving societal change. It is a core outcome of political processes.
Moral dialogues take place in the political realm but do not mature and harbour in the same.
It is the society that nurtures the dialogue and the law that helps in achieving the outcome.
The law of the land leads the social change. However, the nature of morality defines a good
society. The law is required to be in accordance with the moral culture. The law if not in
accordance can also the nature of state to an authoritarian state, or in the worst form a
totalitarian state. The law is the first step for ensuring social change and preserving the order
of the state. Law also needs the will and force of moral voice to be enforced. It is not
coercion alone that can prohibit an immoral act. It is the inner moral conscience that acts a
guiding star in directing an individual’s action. Prohibition can regulate moral behaviour but
not imbibe moral etiquettes in individuals. For instance, corruption in the bureaucratic order
can be prohibited, and thus it can be regulated but it is the inner conscience or the moral
voice that will guide an individual’s actions in making the society free of corruption. Fear can
command and not demand morality. It is the force of moral voice that is to be reckoned with
even in adhering to the law of land.
1.4 SUMMARY
The political and moral though cardinally different are interlinked in myriad ways. The two
cannot be confused to be the same but cannot be compartmentalised too for understanding the
two individually. A free democratic liberal order governs by the sanctity of law. The law is
reinforced by the State apparatus. The political governs by a shared understanding of
morality. The state is a part of the political. The actions of the State have a moral dimension
because they also operate on a shared understanding and a broad consensus of values. The
contemporary political understanding is a reinstatement of morality writ large in the form of
social consensus. The idea of state vs community is now visualised as a political community
instead because of the interdependence of the nations, which has enlarged the ambit of shared
understanding to a more holistic, comprehensive and cohesive understanding of governance.
The idea of governance also has a paradigm of social governance. The various actions of the
State are to be understood in nexus with each other rather than in isolation. The outcome of
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the moral dialogues have matured and the idea of shared values has also reinvented itself to
be more conclusive in its approach. The sanctity of state emanates from the people because it
is the people that authorise the state to govern. The people are themselves guided by a moral
voice and thus the power of moral deliberations reflects at the level of Government as well.
What is political will never have a compartmentalised understanding because politics in itself
is a sum total of attributes of social, economic and moral virtues that guides the governance
of the State.
1.6 BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Unit 2
STRUCTURE
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2.2 INTRODUCTION
One of the oldest disciplines of the world is Political science. Its roots can be traced back to
ancient Greece where it emerged and grew as a branch of philosophy. Aristotle is considered
as the father of political science. He inferred political science as a ‘master science’. It
indicates the inter-disciplinary nature of the discipline and it is a science to be learned by the
masters. For him masters were those who were involved in rational decision making in the
state. If a thorough understand of the evolution of the discipline is made, it could be seen that
it was dominated by philosophy in ancient times. It was dwarfed by orthodoxy,
religion/scriptures and superstitions in medieval times. It was Machiavelli who framed his
statecraft whereby he gave the autonomy of politics and detached it from ethics and religion,
and thereby the autonomous status of the discipline was recognized.
Political Theory, Political Philosophy and Political Science are often used interchangeably.
However, all the three terms denote absolutely three different things- political theory is a
scientific discipline within the ambit of political sciences. It has a focus on how political and
social orders observes, develops and decays. Political philosophy understands every concept
through the lens of ethics.
Political Science is founded upon empiricism. Political Science claims to describe, analyse
and explain political establishments, institutions and the government in an impartial, value-
free manner. In the end of World War II, philosophy, ideas and value judgements dominated,
it was only in the 1950s and 60s, most strongly in the USA, a newer form of political analysis
emerged which largely drew upon behaviourlism.
Political theory and political philosophy may show similarity, but a differences can easily be
identified. It is one of the core desciplines of political science. Lately, it has gained
independent recognition as an academic subject. Previously, those who carried out
investigations in this domain referred to themselves as philosophers or scientists. Political
theory is the most accurate term, to use when referring to the intellectual tradition that
recognises the capacity of seeing beyond immediate practical concerns and ‘watching’ man’s
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societal life critically. Political theory was full fledged political science, because science
could not exist without the theory. As a result political theory can be utilised interchangeably
with political science in a valid and accurate manner.
Political Science has attempted to give credible generalizations and rules of politics and
political behaviour. Political theory deals with the political phenomenon, processes,
institutions and on tangible political behaviour by subjecting it to philosophical or ethical
benchmark. It deals with the query of the best political order, which is only a miniscule part
of a greater question; namely, the ‘ideal form of life that a human being ought to lead within
a larger community’.
Political philosophy can be understood as the philosophical reflection on means and ways we
can arrange our political institutions and social practices. Political Philosophy are the
proposed concept by Philosophers around which the individuals frame the basic principles of
their life.
To lead a good life is what is the aim of philosophy. It not only teaches us What is a good life
but also How to attain such a state. Plato is the father of political philosophy. In
contemporary times Gandhi, Aurbindo ,Tagore, Ambedkar and John Rawls can be called as
political philosophers. Political philosophy deals with ‘what it should be’, i.e it seeks to
achieve the ideal. Political theory tries to define and explain. For example, political
philosophy asks “how is the best state?” In contrast, political theory tries to answer the
question “what is the state”. It tries to reveal this answer from a concrete situation. It was not
till the nineteenth century that a distinction between political theory and political philosophy
was made. According to the traditionalists– political philosophy and political theory were
synonymous. At that time, the theory was wedded in political philosophy. No political theory
could be understood without a philosophical foundation. For example, if one wanted to
understand Plato’s idea of ‘What constitutes a state’, it was important to first understand what
constitute ‘ideal state’, or simply put his idealistic perspectives. The emergence of positivism
in the nineteenth century was the main reason for a need to develop a distinction between
political theory and political philosophy. Modern political scientists do not acknowledge that
theory has a place in political philosophy. According to political scientists guided by
empiricism, the difference between political philosophy and political theory consist of–
• Political theory is a determinant, self-contained power. In the state philosophy, the
theory has no independent existence.
• even though if, theories arise in political philosophy, they are not guided by science or
information. The political theory relies entirely on the information which is proved
through experimentations.
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• The biggest difference between the two is that, political philosophy relies upon the
customs, traditions, and values. Hence assertions are guided by partisanship, in the
absence of objectivity. Political theory is value-neutral, rational and objective in
nature.
• While political theory as embedded in philosophy plays a beneficial role, this theory
is confined to the established beliefs in political philosophy. Mystery and delusion
have no place in political theory.
• The fundamental focus of political philosophy is ‘philosophy’, politics is endowed
with its unique position in political theory.
• The above detailed analysis helps us differentiate between political philosophy and
political theory on three grounds.
• The Objective Difference
• The difference in terms of Subject Matter
• Differences in Validity
In the sphere of Social Sciences, the term ‘method’ and ‘approach’ are rather used vaguely,
and sometimes even unchangeably. However, there is a thin line of difference between the
two. Method is a general term which connotes a particular or a certain way of doing
something. Technically, method may be defined as the system of investigation by which
reliable knowledge could be achieved and reliable conclusions could be made. Some of the
widely used methods are scientific method, inductive method, deductive method,
comparative method, etc. On the other hand, approach is a wider term which connotes both
the ‘method’ as well as our domain of study for developing an understanding for a given
phenomenon. Vernon Van Dyke in his writing, Political Science: A Philosophical Analysis
(1960) stated: “An approach consists of criteria of selection—criteria employed in selecting
the problems or questions to consider and in selecting the data to bring to bear; it consists of
standards governing the inclusion and exclusion of questions and data.” Distinguishing
between the two terms, Dyke has additionally sighted: “In brief, approaches consist of criteria
for selecting problems and relevant data, whereas methods are procedures for getting and
utilizing data.” In a nutshell all approaches are wedded to some method, while all methods
may or may not be wedded to an approach. Broadly speaking, there are two kinds of
approaches- traditional and contemporary. Those that remained relevant till World War II
came to be known as traditional and those which developed thereafter are known to be
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disobedience to the state is justified. In terms of the question of distributive justice, normative
political theory raises the question of freedom and equality, The question on the relative
importance of freedom and equality, what are the moral grounds for enforced substantive
equality, does the autonomy of individual needs to be compatible with the requirements of
pluralism in the society? (ibid)
2.4.1.2 The Major Positions in Normative Political Theory
There are largely three major political traditions of the normative traditions: (Glaser,D.,1995)
Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism is the brainchild of 19th-century British social reformer Jeremy Bentham.
Bentham claimed that human beings seek to maximize pleasure and minimize their pain. The
correct moral choice is therefore which results in the greatest happiness of the greatest
number in the society. It is a quantified approach based on the principle of utility. Any public
policy must strive for a utility which is the maximum possible happiness with minimum
possible pain. This form of utilitarianism however might give rise to majoritarian tendency
since pleasure and pain are defined in numeric terms and not the quality of action. This was
improved upon by John Stuart Mill who believed in qualitative utilitarianism i.e that not
every action can bring an equal amount of pain and pleasure. Certain kinds of intellectual and
aesthetic options are superior to other options which might be equally desired.
Denotilogical Liberalism
In the 1970s a debate was raised against teleological ethics, teleological ethics are basically
“moralities that judge the worth of human conduct according to whether it fulfills a particular
purpose or realizes a particular end or telos”.This was problematic since a. Telelogical
approach such as utilitarianism did not account for individual pluralism in defining happiness
and pain b. It prioritizes ends over means.
The critics of teleological ethics came to be known as deontological or Kantian liberals.
Deontology means the ethics of right or duty favorably which for these critics is superior to
teleology which is the ethics of end. The principal figure of deontology is Immanuel Kant.
Kant believed that the sacrifice of an individual for a higher goal is never justified.
Individuals for Kant end in themselves. Kantian liberals envision an autonomous individual
who is free to pursue their ends (ibid).
Communitarianism
The starting point of communitarianism is the critique of the individual self. Michael Sandel
believes that the liberal ideals for an individual do not account for claims and obligations
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which arose from the personal and social ties of an individual. Human beings for
communitarianism are not atomistic elements rather their destiny is tied up with the social
order that they are a part of. They will never seek out an individualist existence unless they
are alienated or shunned from society. Whatever rights and obligation an individual have is
derived from the community or society he or she is part of. In a community, there is no
concept of an individual end. The entire community works towards a morally worthy
common good. (Ibid)
2.4.1.3 Normative Theory Critiques
There are three broad areas of criticism against the normative theory as highlighted: (Glaser,
D., 1995)
Logical positivism
Ludwig Wittgenstein in his text Tractatus Logico-Philosophical formed the basis of logical
positivism. For Wittgenstein what makes the language meaning or the capacity to
communicate is their names. They have external objects as their meaning. Similarly, the
proposition with external meanings is true. True propositions can only be derived from
material objects or direct sense experience. If that is the case then all the assumptions of
normative theory get into serious trouble. Wittgenstein himself believed that political
philosophy should limit itself to just the “factual and descriptive language of natural science”.
(Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 1889-1951. (1933).How do normative theorists respond? Normative
theorists state that the nature of reality or “what it is” is not immaterial to normative school.
What normative school offers is the principles that forms the foundation of any social reality.
The more ambitious response to the criticism comes from normative theorists such as Alan
Gerwith that rights such as freedom and well-being can be derived from basic requirements
of human action. Similarly, John Rawls states that his veil of ignorance which is required to
set a foundation of social order is not necessarily based on any factual values but has
principles suitable to cover any prospective members of the society. (Rawls, John,1971)
Relativism
Moral relativists do not believe in the notion of absolute morality, they argue that all morality
is relative hence there cannot be an inherently good value. The values are always about each
other and if that is the case then there can not be truly any normative value. Communitarians
might argue that in a community there might be values that are inherently good or desirable
while some values or notions must be avoided at all costs. What makes this possible is the
common language which communicates such values in any particular social order. But this
argument has a loophole: the world is not one common culture that shares one common
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language, therefore for moral relativists, it might be too optimistic to assume that there might
be a universal common value that is considered desirable by everyone. Normative reply to
this by stating that there are certain goods or values which are deemed desirable at least by a
certain section of the population across the globe. For example, feminism as a movement that
is based on the equality of all sexes has found recognition in almost all the countries across
the globe.
Determinism
There is a school of thought which believes that individuals are incapable of being
autonomous agents which is a precondition of moral choosing. They are always constrained,
forced, or even coerced into making decisions or claims in society. There are multiple forms
of determinism, some argue that individuals are constrained by hidden structures or historical
processes, economic life. Some determinists believe individuals to be constrained by national
traditions or even supernatural. Some determinists believe that we are determined by our
subconscious or genetic inheritance. There are two things to be considered: are all the above-
stated determinants free from moral choices or to be precise “value-free”? The second is that
determinism may constraint choices or reduce the scope of option in any particular choice.
But does it mean that the alternatives which are left cannot have inherent right or wrong in
them? Two things can be offered by normative theory here: first that human agency is always
possible in situations where it might not seem plausible: a person who is at gunpoint may still
have options however limiting. The second is that even deterministic factors are a result of
some moral context.
2.4.2 Historical Approach
The historical approach comes from the idea that political phenomenon must always be better
understood in a historical context such as an event place or date, for example, would World
War I still happen if Archduke Franz Fernidad would not have been assassinated?
Political theorists such as Nicollo Machiavelli, George Sabine, William Archibald dunning
believe that politics is always linked to the historical context of the order. Sir John Seeley
went so far as to state that “History is past politics, politics is present history”.
The historical approach in politics can have two engagements: that the present laws which
dictate politics arrive from an analysis of historical events for example the historical
materialism process theorized by Marx and Hegel. Second is an attempt the understand
political thought through history, an example for this would be George Sabine’s “A history of
political thought”.(Sabine G.H et al 1973)The historical political theory stands for taking
historical events into account. The historical approach also helps in setting up a chronological
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of political events. These past events must be political relevance or implications for the
present, for example, one cannot understand the structure of present modern states without
understanding the treaty of Westphalia of 1848. These events provide the matter on which
political theory regarding a phenomenon could be understood. Researchers may discover how
governments, political parties, and a variety of other institutions functioned in the past and
their successes and failures, from which they can draw lessons that will aid them in their
future decisions. There however needs to be a critical attitude towards evaluating historical
events, the proverb “history is written by victors” must be taken in the literal sense. Who
documents events and for what purpose? Are there certain sections of society whose voices
are not taken into account? Certain events which might be left out or missed? Alan Ball takes
up these issues and states “past evidence does leave-alarming gaps, and political history is
often simply a record of great men and great events, rather than a comprehensive account of
total political activity.” (Ball, A.R et al, 2000)
Hence, one needs to be discerning in the evaluation of history. However, to rectify this a
school of thought “subaltern studies” have been developed to document the history of the
marginalized section of people to take into account their voices in history which are normally
excluded.
The best illustration of the historical approach is the work of George H. Sabine who gave a
very practical definition of political science. (Sabine et. al,1973) He proposed that political
science needs to be included in every subject which is discussed by prominent political
philosophers such as Aristotle, Rousseau, or Plato. In their writings, we could find solutions
to the problems these philosophers have posed about the reality or validity of political beliefs.
Throughout history, political philosophers have pondered issues such as the meaning of
freedom, why men obey the government, the extent of government activities, and the
meaning of equality. In addition, if these political philosophers have not effectively addressed
concerns regarding the state, the relationship between the state and society, and the
relationship between the individual and the state, we may create a list of topics and explore
them in-depth.(ibid) These are the roots of political thinking, according to conservative
theorists. Sabine and other traditional authors have placed a strong emphasis on the historical
approach. For Sabine Political theory advances in a “reference to a pretty specific situation”
and, therefore, reconstruction of “the time, place and the circumstances in which it was
produced” becomes imperative. A political theory always exists in a context but that does not
mean that it is not relevant in a different context or time frame. As a consequence, a strong
political theory has everlasting significance, even if it is the outcome of a one-of-a-kind set of
historical circumstances. It is exactly because political philosophy is universal that it has
legitimacy. According to Sabine, a typical political theory combines “factual declarations
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regarding the condition of events that gave birth to it,” “statements of what may be roughly
dubbed a causal kind,” and “statements that something ought to happen or is the right and
desirable thing to have happened.” According to Sabine, political theories are made up of
three elements: factual, causal, and valuation. Political views that have a lot of sways have
usually emerged during times of hardship and pressure. There have been two periods of about
fifty years each in two places of quite restricted areas where political philosophy has thrived
the most in the known history of more than two thousand years – (1) in Athens, between the
second and third quarters of the fourth century B.C., when Plato and Aristotle wrote their
great works, and (2) in England, between 1640 and 1690, when Hobbes, Locke, and others
developed their political theories. (ibid)
Significant changes occurred throughout each of these periods in Europe's social and
intellectual history. As Sabine would put it, great political ideas are “hidden” in the
“interstices of political and social crises.” They are generated not by crises in and of
themselves, but by the reaction intellectuals have to them. To fully appreciate political theory,
it is necessary to have a thorough understanding of the period, region, and circumstances in
which it arose. (ibid)
The political philosopher may not actively engage in his day's politics, but he is influenced by
it, and he attempts fiercely to influence it in his own time. According to Sabine, political
theories “have a dual purpose” in that they influence ideas that become causes and serve as
causal events in historical settings while also belonging to the abstract domain of thought. It's
also crucial to understand if a political ideology is accurate or incorrect, sound or ludicrous,
trustworthy or untrustworthy. This brings up the question of values. As a result, we must
make every effort to include factual, causal, and valuational elements into our understanding
of political theory.
Historical Approach: An Analysis
From several perspectives, the historical technique of understanding politics has been
criticized. One of the fundamental fulcrums of the concerns is that history has two faces:
factual documentation, which is relatively crude, and factual and phenomenon interpretation,
which is more nuanced. The accumulating evidence must once again be examined in its
proper context. The conclusion is that when analyzing data and facts, sufficient caution
should be applied, and it is not surprising that this caution is not always practiced, resulting in
historical facts that do not meet the intended objective of people who use them. This is the
most serious critique leveled against the historical approach to political research. In this
regard, we might recollect the point of view of a critic.
“History in the light of the best modern practice is to be sharply distinguished from the
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antiquarianism or the collection of facts for their own sake and should be defined rather as the
study of problems or causes, the interpretation of phenomena”. The historian's level of
attention, of course, cannot be foreseen ahead of time. It is determined by the individual as
much as the facts. However, it is necessary to use caution. Vigilance is required since history
contains misleading information. Accurately recording facts and events are not always
feasible. This isn't a fabricated charge.
Alan Ball states “past evidence does leave–alarming gaps, and political history is often
simply a record of great men and great events, rather than a comprehensive account of total
political activity.” (Ball et al, 2000)Few historians give historical events and facts a broad and
liberal interpretation. They have a warped vision of reality due to their narrow perspective.
Political science could not have a more strong and secure foundation. The historian must be
truthful and objective in their assessment of the data when acquiring it. Such an approach can
only improve the study of politics.
Sir Ivor Jennings is a well-known British constitutional specialist, and his interpretations of
several aspects of the British Constitution are still considered trustworthy. His perspective on
history is singular. His research was aided by the depth of his analysis, the breadth of his
vision, and the objectivity with which he treated his subjects, and students of politics still
remember him.(Jennings I, 1959) Based on historical documents, Jennings has compiled a
detailed description of the British Prime Minister, Parliament, and other government
ministries. Robert Mackenzie (Mackenzie, R.T, 1955) researched the party system, while
Mackintosh investigated the workings of England's cabinet system. Their method is
historical, although the records have been carelessly construed. (Mackintosh et al 1872) The
words of these authors are both inspiring and precedent-setting. Many other academics have
relied on historical evidence to examine politics. Many have been successful, but not all.
2.4.3 Empirical Approach (Empiricism)
The history of empirical approach can be traced back to Aristotle (384-22 BCE) who
attempted to classify constitutions and to Machiavelli (1469-1527 CE) who gave a realistic
account of statecraft in The Prince. Even John Rawls (1921-2002) also used empirical
method for theorizing at his principles of justice. In many ways such writings form the
fundamental basis of what we today read as comparative government and politics, and gave
rise to a principally institutional approach to the subject. Empirical approach is the doctrine
which believes that all the hypothesis and theories should be tested by a practical process of
observation and experiment. This approach out rightly rejects theories that make value
judgements as having the status of knowledge. John Locke (1632-1704), advocated that the
brain of a human is a tabula rasa (blank tablet) on which information gets imprinted in the
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form of sense-data through the use of our senses. In the twentieth century empirical approach
has got closely associated with reasonableness or pragmatism, as an epistemological theory.
All forms of empiricism draw a clear line of difference between ‘facts’, that are arguments
that have been supported by experience, observation and experiment, and ‘values’, which are
mere beliefs and opinions that cannot be trusted upon. In a nutshell empirical approach seeks
to establish a dispassionate and impartial approach to political analysis in order to provide an
account of the political reality. Unlike the normative approach which is ‘prescriptive’ in
nature which attempts to make only judgements and offer recommendations; empirical
approach is ‘descriptive’ in nature as it seeks to analyze and explain phenomena.
Thus, empirical approach forms the basis for the later on rise of other pragmatic approaches
like positivism and behavorialism. Under the influence of positivism, political theorists
marched in the lights of gaining scientific understanding about the political processes based
on principles that could be objectively confirmed and proven. As a result they strove to
develop a natural science of society, and philosophy was reduced to a simple branch of
science in the process. Such a view of theory also presented the function of the theorist as that
of a detached spectator, devoid of any loyalties and ideals. The golden years of this approach
were in the early twentieth century, whereby it reached greater heights, and has subsequently
been come under attack. Stringent empiricism has been criticized on the ground that it tends
to produce a simplistic model of science that has been badly dented by the advances in
Philosophy of Science. The empirical approach has significantly enhanced our knowledge of
the theoretical foundations of political science, is now being utilized for better understanding
of classical questions, including those which are eventually value-judgements. Science relies
on evidence, similarly Political Science also bank on empirical and logical statements. It is
maintained that value-free accurate observation and reasoning by different persons would
lead to similar conclusion; hence empirical and logical evidences may be verified.
2.5 SUMMARY
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investigation of political problems not only to show what a political practice is, but also to
show what it means. In showing what a practice means, or what it ought to mean, political
theory can alter what it is.’ There are several approaches to understand the politics and
political realities broadly clubbed under two categories- Traditional and Modern. While the
traditional ones dominated till World War II, Contemporary ones which were pragmatic in
approach rule the world of Political Theory till date. These approaches help one understand
critical concepts like State, Society, Values etc.
2.7 BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Unit 3
TRADITIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY:
LIBERAL, MARXIST, ANARCHIST, AND CONSERVATIVE
Divyangna Sharma
Research Scholar
University of Delhi
STRUCTURE
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3.2 INTRODUCTION
The idea of political tradition is not static, it could mean anything from believing in a set of
values - such as voting for one political party to a set of beliefs such as freedom of speech
and expression. The major tenant of a political tradition however is represented by
consistency although that might not always be the case. For example, the proponents of
negative liberty believe that the state is inherently “evil” whereas proponents of positive
liberty associate the state with a proactively positive role of the state.
This chapter focuses on four major political traditions: Liberalism, Marxism, Anarchism, and
Conservatism. The chapter attempts to understand what these traditions are, the central
tenants or themes of these traditions, and the differences which exist within these traditions.
The liberal tradition of Political Science is derived from the Latin word liber which refers to a
class of free people. The idea of Liberty represents the freedom of an individual which is
consistent with the freedom of the society the individual inhabits. Liberalism works on the
premise of constitutionalism and consent and the state under liberal tradition works under the
principle of Laissez-Faire i.e leave the man alone. The pillar of liberalism is to protect the
citizen from the tyranny of the government. Liberalism as a political alternative emerged after
the breakdown of Feudalism in Western Europe. The idea of liberty and freedom, to break
away from the hierarchical feudal division of power created radical shifts across Europe. The
English civil war in the seventeenth century, French Revolution in 1789, and the American
Revolution in 1776. All three of them were based on questioning the divine rights of
monarchial powers which derived their legitimacy from an unelected aristocracy. Liberalism
became the rallying cry of the middle class who wanted to replace absolutism with the idea of
constitutionalism that is being governed by laws that are consensually agreed upon rather
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Negative Liberty and Positive Liberty. The former is negative in the sense that it denotes an
absence of external restrictions or constraints i.e, an individual is to be left alone and must be
able to act in a way he or she prefers. Positive Liberty on the other hand represents that one is
autonomous or one’s own master. Here the individual has the liberty to develop his or her
skills and talent to achieve their fullest possible potential. (Berlin, I, 1958)
Reason
The liberal tradition gains its legitimacy from the idea of reason. Individuals are free or are at
liberty because they are capable of thinking rationally and deciding on and pursuing their best
interests. Liberals are strongly biased against the values of paternalism which is authority
exercised from above and is modeled on the relationship between father and child. The
second key of the reason is the idea of progress and advancement, the power of reason gives
human beings the capacity to transform their lives and fashion their destinies. The third pillar
for the case of the reason is Knowledge, it is only through knowledge that an individual can
be free from superstition and prejudice. Finally, Reason dictates the ideas of supporting
discussion debate, and arguments, the liberals staunchly believe that conflict can be settled
through debate and negotiation, the use of violence is only justified for self-defense,
countering oppression, and defending one’s liberty. That is also when one has exhausted the
capacity to reason and argue. (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 1996).
Justice
Justice in a more general sense if giving an individual what they are due i.e what is entitled to
them. The liberal idea of justice on the other hand represents different types of equality. The
tenets of equality for liberals are based on the idea that individuals have equal moral worth.
The second foundational principle is the idea of equal citizenship i.e each citizen is entitled to
rights and liberties extended to the next citizen. Factors such as class, caste, gender, race,
color. Liberalism in this sense is “difference blind”.The idea of liberty enforces the principle
of legality in the decision-making and electoral process where every citizen gets a vote and
that vote has one value. (Bell, D, 2014)The third tenant of liberal justice is the idea of
equality of justice, there needs to be an equal playing field. The idea is that an individual
must have equal opportunities to develop their unique skills and abilities. This leads to the
idea of “meritocracy” that is one’s social position is defined by one’s ability and hard work.
(Riesman, D, 1967)
Toleration
“I detest what you say but will defend till death your right to say it” - Voltaire
A long with the ideas of justice, individualism, and freedom; is vital of toleration. Toleration
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is built on the fact that individuals may differ in endowments, opinions, gender, caste,
religious inclinations sexualities, etc but they must be free to pursue their for liberal tradition
stand. John Locke for example defended an individual right to pursue his or her religion
without the interference of the state. J.S Mill in his treatise titled On liberty defended the right
to freedom of speech by arguing:
“If all mankind minus one. were of one opinion, and only one person was of the contrary
opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person, than he if he had
the power, would be justified in silencing mankind”(Mill, J.S 1859).
"necessary evil," as Thomas Paine put it, in that it is required to provide conditions for
orderly existence but is evil in that it imposes a collective will on individuals. (Paine, T,
1975). Finally, the classical liberals subscribe to the positive impact of civil society which is
the “realm of freedom” as opposed to the state which is a “realm of coercion”.
According to Stanford Encyclopedia Of Philosophy Tenant of Classical liberalism are:
Rights: For Thomas Jefferson and John Locke Natural rights are endowed on human beings
by God and thus cannot be violated by anyone. Utilitarianism: Utilitarianism as a doctrine
was developed by Jermy Bantam and J.S Mill. Bentham advocated a utilitarian social order
which was based on “the greatest happiness of the greatest masses” here the values of pain
and pleasure for Bentham were understood in the quantitative sense where each action had an
equal worth. Mill modifies this idea where he deemed that every action differs qualitatively
where it brings different degrees of pain and pleasure. Certain acts hold more pleasure or pain
than others.
Economic Liberalism: Adam Smith and David Ricardo endorsed the idea of freedom of the
market which was invariably linked to the freedom of individuals who are making voluntary
economic association with each other. The forces of demand and supply are adequate to
regulate these associations.
Social Darwinism: The idea of Social Darwinism is derivative of the theory proposed by
Darwin in the origin of species by Darwin of the doctrine of the survival of the fittest. Here
the individual will only survive based on his one merit and hard work. Neoliberalism or
Neoclassical Liberalism: The idea of neoclassical liberalism was “counter-revolution” which
was to halt or reverse the trend towards big government and state intervention. The idea of
the market was supreme to the government and must be free from any political control.
Modern Liberalism
The idea of modern liberalism developed in the 20th century in the later stages of
industrialization to address the spread of slums, poverty, ignorance, and disease. The idea of
unrestricted freedom of individuals and a free market could not translate into an equally just
society. Modern Liberalism was based on certain values which differed from the classical
ones: The idea of Individuality- According to J.S Mill liberty did not just mean the absence of
constraints but also a positive and constructive force where individuals take control of their
destiny and achieve self-realization. He believed in the idea of individuality which is the
fulfillment of self achieved through the realization of an individual distinctive or unique
identity or qualities that distinguish one person from all others. The second value endorsed by
the Modern Liberals is the idea of Positive Freedom advocated by T.H Green who believed
the pursuit of unrestricted profit was responsible for giving rise to poverty and injustice, he
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emphasizes individuals who are egotistical but are constrained by some degree of altruism
that is the concerts for interests and welfare of others based on either enlightened self-interest
of belief in common humanity. Social Liberalism was sought by the Modern Liberals where
the minimal state was to be replaced by a welfare state which takes the responsibility for the
social welfare of its citizens discharged through a range of social security, health education,
and other services. The final tenant of modern liberalism is the idea of economic
management. The modern liberals discarded the idea of Lassiez Faire and instead replaced it
with the Keynesian doctrine which is named after John Maynard Keynes who in his The
General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (Keynes,1936) argued that government
could manage their economies by influencing the levels of aggregate demand.
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of men which determines their existence; it is, on the contrary, their social existence which
determines their consciousness.”(Marx, K 1970)
Marx here established the idea of a historic bloc of society where the society is based on an
economic base that dictates all social relationships in the society. It is the economic position
according to Marx which determines one socio-political position in society. If the above
paragraph is understood emphasizestoit establishes two major points of Marxian philosophy:
1. The basic structure of a society is its economic structure which consists of (a) the
“material forces of production,” that is, the labor and means of production, and (b) the
larger “production relations,” which refers to the social and political institutions that
control production and distribution.
2. A superstructure arises from this economic base, consisting of legal and political
"forms of social consciousness" that correspond to the economic foundation. One's
political and social ideology, consciousness, and location are all determined by one's
economic base, which Marx refers to as a class. The economic foundation of social
order lies at the heart of Marx's whole school of thinking.
The idea of class thus becomes the referent unit of Marxian analysis where Marx states that
“The history of all existing society is the history of class struggle”. History for Marx goes in a
dialectical form where there is a Thesis, Synthesis, and Antithesis. The progression is enabled
by the struggle between the two classes which gives rise to a new structure of society that is
based on the resulting economic order. The class struggle, therefore, is expressed in a
dialectical nature. Two classes are opposed to each other through various points in history:
The owners of the means of production which is the bourgeoisie and the workers which are
the proletariats. Historical materialism explains the progressive nature of the history of class
struggle. Primitive communism, in the hunting-gathering stages there was no private property
hence there were no classes. Ancient history had a class of slave owners who were the
oppressing class and slaves who were the oppressed class. During the Feudal period, the
Landowners were the oppressing class and serfs were the oppressed class. During the
Capitalist period, it is the bourgeoisie and proletariats, in the socialist phase the oppressing
class would be the state managers and the workers would be oppressed, and eventually,
communism would come into being and there will be classes in society. (Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2003)
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3.4.2 Alienation
Alienation comes from the Latin work Alienare which means to remove or take away. For
Karl Marx, it is a social or political process. He uses the term entfremdung which translates
into estrangement which is separation or detachment from things to which they are naturally
tied to. Entfremdung represents the situation of separation from social affairs and
estrangement of their human nature i.e species essence as a result of living in a class-based,
class-conscious stratified society. (Petrovic, G 1963)
Workers in a capitalist order are compelled to sell their labor to the capitalist and lose control
over it and their labor becomes simply a means to the end of capitalists. They also have no
control over the product of their labor. Their labor itself which is their life activity does not
belong to them. They get estranged from their labor and the product of their labor. Henced
the workers become alienated from their own self and own nature and also alienated from
other human beings as well as their work. Alienation for Marx is of four types:
1. Objectification is the alienation of a worker from the product of his or her own labor
2. Self-Alienation is the alienation of a worker from his or her own self and activity
where the labor is simply producing for the ends of a capitalist profit. The worker is
merely a clog in the capitalist machine. Labour does not add value to his being but is
simply a means to survive and thus is alienated from himself or herself
3. Species-Alienation Man according to Marx is not an atomistic individual but has an
inner life or spiritual being which is based on previous history. According to Marx, it
is labor that distinguishes man from other lower animals. Man can only produce when
he is free and the production conforms with the ordains of nature. A condition which
is not allowed by capitalism hence man is alienated from his species being
4. Alienation from other people - If a person is alienated from his or her species being,
they would be alienated from their fellow beings. (ibid)
3.4.3 State and Revolution in Marxist Tradition
Apart from liberal state theory, Marxist state theory is arguably the most well-known.
Marxist ideology not only questions the fundamental conceptions of the liberal state but also
emphasizes that it enslaves the majority of men in society to organizational achieve its goals
and that it must be abolished or crushed for common men to be free. However, one issue with
the academic examination of the Marxist theory of the state is that the theory has never been
rigorously examined by Marx. (Ypi, L.2014)
“Political power, properly so-called, is just the organized power of one class for dominating
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another,” Marx writes in the communist manifesto. “The executive of the contemporary state
is merely a committee for administering the common concerns of the whole bourgeoisie,”
says the same book. (Marx, Karl 1818-1883)
Marx, Engels, and their followers (especially Lenin) were skeptical of the social contract
theory as a source of state formation. They took a mechanistic approach to the origins,
emphasizing that, while the state is man's invention, there is no emotion or concept behind it,
just the impact of material conditions, which they called economic conditions.
They've classified society's evolution into four categories: ancient communist society, slave
society, feudal society, and industrial society. There was no state in the original communist
society since private property did not exist. The private property system served as a possible
catalyst for the emergence of the state. Where the anti-state came to exist as a defense to
private property. For Marxist State will wither away with a communist revolution. People
will be able to move to a radical transformation of their position through revolution after they
have become conscious of their loss, alienation, as a universal inhuman predicament. This
revolution will pave the way for the return of liberty and the foundation of communism.
“In the place of the old bourgeois society with its classes and its class antagonisms, there will
be an association in which the free development of each is the condition for the free
development of all”.
The word Anarchy comes from the Greek word Anarkhos which means “without rule”.It was
first used in a negative sense during the French Revolution to discredit the protesters.
Anarchism popularly means chaos and disorder. The first time the word was used in a
positive sense by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon in his text What is Property? He declared, “I am an
anarchist”.(Proudhon, 1993) anarchists believe that the state is both evil and unnecessary,
their idea of stateless society through the abolition of law and government. The core value of
anarchism is unrestricted personal autonomy.
The first statement of the Anarchist principle was produced by William Godwin in his
Enquiry Concerning Political Justice. (Godwin, W,1793) However, Anarchism as a political
tradition has been unusual in the sense that its philosophy has not succeeded in winning
power at least national level. The closest Anarchy came to be as a political force is post the
Spanish Civil war where anarchists controlled the eastern part of Spain and set up workers’
and peasants’ collectives throughout Catalonia. Anarchists emphasize a non-hierarchical and
egalitarian social order.
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humankind. From the perspective of anarchists state is not required to create a harmonious
social order, it will arise spontaneously and naturally.
For collective anarchists, the human capacity for sociable and cooperative behaviors will
come naturally and for individualistic anarchists, it is the enlightened human reason which
will enable cordiality. (Parsons, L.E, 1890)
Anti-Clericalism
Anti clericalism for anarchists is stemmed from a similar distaste for authority that they show
towards the state. Religion itself has been seen as a source of authority in general. The idea of
God required complete submission to a higher authority. This submission must be
unconditional and unquestioned. Religion does not leave any space for free will or individual
autonomy and thus anarchists find themselves at odds with religion. (ibid)
Economic Freedom
Besides the anti-state state attitude, Anarchists hope to transform the social and economic
system. Bakunin states “Political power and wealth are inseparable”. When anarchism
initially developed as a political camp it grounded itself in the workers’ movement which was
driven by socialist principles. However, for anarchists, the ruling class was not understood in
simply economic terms. It was anyone who had access to wealth, power, and privilege in
society. Bakunin divided the social order into three parts: a large majority that was exploited,
a smaller section who did exploit but was also exploited, and finally an elite group of
oppressors and exploiters. All anarchists are against capitalism as well as state intervention
which they felt was simply an extension of control in society. (Ibid)
3.5.2 Branches of Anarchism
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy in its compilation of Anarchism (2017) discuss the
following schools of anarchist thought:
Anarcho-syndicalism is another name for Collectivist Anarchism. Mikhail Bakunin (1814-
1876), a Russian anarchist, was the first to argue for the total elimination of private
ownership of means of production and the state of the means. It, like Communism, advocated
for the collective ownership and management of the means of production by the producers
themselves. The revolution would be sparked by limited acts of violence perpetrated by an
elite clique, inspiring workers to revolt and jointly seize control of the means of production.
Workers would be compensated based on the amount of time they devote to output. The main
distinction between communal and communist anarchism may be found here.
Communist Anarchism (or Anarcho-Communism): This school of thought advocates for a
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free society with numerous self-governing communes that are linked through federation and
have direct democracy or democracy based on common consent as to the political
organizational structure.
The means of production will be used jointly rather than owned collectively. Rather than
payment, the commune would have free access to resources and excess. Egalitarianism and
the elimination of social hierarchy and class differentiation are central to anarchy
Communism. It is unique in that it represents both the eradication of capitalism and the
abolition of money.
During the English Civil War (1642-1651) and the French Revolution, early Anarchist
Communist currents emerged (1788 - 1799). Although the Frenchman Joseph Déjacque
(1821 - 1864) was an earlier example, Peter Kropotkin (1842 - 1921) and Emma Goldman
(1869 - 1940) are arguably the neoliberals emphasizes best-known Anarcho-Communists. In
the early twentieth century, anarcho-syndicalism was a form of anarchism that focused
largely on the labor movement. It advocates revolutionary trade unions as a tool for social
transformation, intending to replace was capitalism and the state with a new society
controlled democratically by workers. It seeks to abolish the wage system as well as private
ownership of industrial assets, both of which it thinks contribute to class divisions.
Communist or Collectivist Anarchism (see above) is commonly followed by Anarcho-
Syndicalists, and the movement is more of a workplace organizational framework than a full
economic theory.
Individualist Anarchism (or Libertarian Anarchism)
Individualist anarchism is focused on the pursuit of self-interest and individual conscience.
They think that any collective entity or public power will only result in individual tyranny.
Individualist anarchism can be argued to coincide with the concept of negative liberty.
Positive liberty is emphasized in social anarchism. Individualist Anarchism promotes the
private property and the market economy, although some adherents think surplus should be
distributed.
William Godwin (1756 - 1836) argued for an extreme version of Individualist Anarchy,
urging the abolition of all forms of labor collaboration. Max Stirner (1806 - 1856), one of the
first and most well-known proponents of Individualist Anarchism, suggested an extreme
egoist variant of it, which supports the person doing precisely what he wants without regard
for God, state, or moral norms.
There are several types of Individualist Anarchism, including the following:
Mutualism is an anarchist school of thought associated with Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-
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1865), who envisioned a society in which each individual might own a means of production,
either individually or collectively, with trade reflecting equal amounts of labor (the labor
theory of value). Mutualists support markets and private property in labor's product only to
the extent that they guarantee the worker's right to the entire result of their labor. Mutualists,
according to some observers, are more concerned with the association and so fall halfway
between Individualist and Social or Collectivist Anarchism.
Individualist Anarchism, often known as Free-Market Anarchism (or Anarcho-Capitalism), is
a more radical variant of Individualist Anarchism that tries to reconcile Anarchism with
Capitalism. It is an element of the libertarian movement. It advocates for the state's abolition,
as well as the provision of law enforcement, courts, national defense, and all other security
services in a free market rather than through compulsory taxation; complete deregulation of
non-intrusive personal and economic activities; and a self-regulated market.
Agorism is a radical form of anarcho-capitalism and libertarianism developed by Samuel
Edward Konkin III (1947 - 2004) and based on Murray Rothbard's (1926 - 1995) ideas, with
the ultimate goal of a society in which all human interactions are voluntary exchanges, a
completely free market in an underground or "counter economy" in which the State is
obsolete.
3.5.3 Roads to Anarchy
Anarchists are anti-political in the sense that they are repelled by conventional processes and
machinery of politics. They limit their scope to simply writing and experimenting in
communal or cooperative politics. So what methods do anarchists pursue to realize their
goals?
Revolutionary Non-violence
The 19th century saw a period where anarchist leadership tried to provoke the masses for
insurrection and revolt. Michael Bakunin for example led to a conspirational brotherhood, the
Alliance for Social Democracy in anarchist risings of France and Italy. But more or less
Anarchist uprisings failed to gather long-term momentum since they support spontaneous
action rather than the careful organization.
Anarchist violence has been prominent in two periods particularly: the Late 19th century,
reaching its peak in the 1890s and again in the 1970s. Anarchists have employed terrorism or
clandestine violence often involving bombing or assassination designed to create an
atmosphere of terror or apprehension. For anarchists violence itself is justified as a form of
revenge and retribution.
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Direct Action
Short of a revolutionary assault on existing society anarchists have employed tactics of direct
action. Direct action may change from passive resistance to terrorism. Anarcho-Syndicalists
for example refuse to engage in electoral politics instead exert pressure on employers by
boycotting their products, sabotaging machinery, and organizing strike action. From
anarchists’ point of view, direct action has two advantages. The first is that it is
uncontaminated by the process of government and machinery of the state. The second is that
direct action can be organized based on decentralization and participatory decision-making.
Non-Violence
Anarchists like Godwin and Proudhon regard violence abhorrent principle. These latter
anarchists have often been attracted to the principles of nonviolence and pacifism developed
by the Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy and Mahatma Gandhi. The principle of nonviolence has
appealed to anarchists for two reasons: First, it reflects a respect for human beings as moral
and autonomous creatures. As a political approach, nonviolence has proven appealing.
Mahatama Gandhi emancipated India with the use of Satyagrah based on principles of truth
and non-violence.
Conservatism as a term with political connotation was first used in the United States of
America to imply a pessimistic state of affairs. The group of people who were opposed to the
French Revolution was also deemed to be conservatives. In the United Kingdom
“Conservatives” came to be known as “Tory” which became one of the two political parties
in the UK. Conservatism stems from a desire to conserve other existing orders and resist any
changes to the same. (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2015)
It was Edmund’s Burke Reflection on the Revolution in France which stated deep regret of
the state of affairs in France kicked off the French revolution. According to Burke the
destruction of the ancien regime was one of the worst atrocities in the history of mankind.
The idea of conservatism was placed defensively against the changing social order of the 19th
century. The trend towards conservatism has been varied across Europe and the western
world: In the United Kingdom conservatism has been associated with the willingness to
“change to preserve”.The authoritarian conservatism which persisted in Europe in the early
twentieth century especially in Germany and Italy only transformed post World War II, when
conservative political groups finally accepted the ideas of political democracy and social
reforms. (Burke, E, 2006)
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The resilient character of conservatism is perhaps found in the fact that it is one of the most
intellectually modest of political ideologies. It has been ironically constantly evolving
through various stages of political history. The two biggest examples would be the new right
which developed under Ronald Reagan in the United States and Margaret Thatcher in the
United Kingdom.
The problem with understanding conservatism is first it is easier to understand what they
oppose. A second problem is the fact that defining conservatism runs at the risk of irritating
conservatives themselves. They prefer to think of conservatism as a state of mind rather than
a well-defined ideology. To understand what conservatism is it the following tenets of
conservatism are required to be understood.
3.6.1 Core Themes
Tradition
The major pillar of conservative tradition is its defense of tradition which could be religious
faith or social order or even a form of authority such as monarchical tradition. There are also
instances when all three snowball into one as was the medieval English society. Edmund
Burke defined a social order based on all three- in terms of religion he stated that society was
shaped by “the law of our creator”. Similarly, a society for Burke is a partnership between
“those who are living, those who are dead and those who are to be born”. A tradition for
conservatives is the repository of the wisdom of the past. The logic is that the values which
have survived have done so only because they survived the test of time and therefore must
not be tampered with.
In the United Kingdom, the monarchy still exists because it provides a focus on national
loyalty. Tradition also gives both society and the individual a sense of identity, rootedness,
and belonging. (Key elements of Conservatism)
Human Imperfection
Conservatives vouch for the notion that human beings are both imperfect and unpredictable.
Human beings according to conservatives are firstly psychologically limited and dependent
creatures who fear instability and isolation. They are drawn to what is “known”.They desire
security which compels them to go for a social order which ensures stability in an
unpredictable world. They subscribe to the Hobbesian view of human nature which is
inherently selfish and greedy. Crime exists in society because of human nature. Only order
can allow human beings from giving in to their violent and selfish impulses. Human beings'
intellectual powers are also understood to be limited, for conservatives the world is far too
complicated to be understood by human beings. Ideas must be grounded into something
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having a clear authority helps to promote discipline. For these reasons, Conservatives have a
reputation for being wary of attempts to undermine governmental authority. Indeed, doing so
would be completely unacceptable to nineteenth-century Authoritarian Conservatives, who
see political authority in whatever form as absolute. (ibid).
Property
Property is a notion that conservatives place a high value on. They think that having private
property or assets offers several advantages. Conservatives, like many Liberals, accept the
notion that property ownership is a manifestation of merit; that is, a person's ability to build a
significant amount of property or money is a result of his desire to work hard throughout his
life and put his abilities to good use. Many Conservatives, on the other hand, maintain that
property ownership has broader social and psychological benefits.
First possession of property ensures financial security. Second, it is argued that a society that
enables private property ownership drives its citizens to follow the law and behave lawfully.
(ibid)
3.6.2 Types of Conservatism
Authoritarian Conservatism
Authoritarian conservatism comes from the tradition which has favored authoritarian rule,
especially in Europe. Joseph De Maistre was one of the staunchest defenders of the French
monarchy and the toughest critic of the French revolution. In his text the Du Pape endorsed
the idea that above the earthly rule there exists a higher spiritual authority of the Pope. He
stood for the preservation of order without which he felt the society would be thrown off in
chaos and oppression. Another example of authoritarian rule was Russia where Russian ruler
Tsar Nicholas I proclaimed the principles of “orthodoxy, autocracy, and nationality”.
Paternalistic Conservatism
Paternalistic conservatism can be traced back to the Anglo-American tradition inspired by
Edmund Burke who espoused that if the change is natural and inevitable then it must not be
resisted. The characteristic of this style of conservatism is cautious, modest and pragmatic.
The values of conservatism can only be preserved under practical circumstances. There are
two strands of paternalistic conservatism:
One Nation conservatism Benjamin Disraeli, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom set
up the foundations of this type of conservatism via his texts of Sybil (1845) and Coningsby
(1844). These novels focused on the principle of social obligation rather than extreme
individualism. Disraeli’s ideas can be best summed up as prudent and principal. He stated
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that Britain was in danger of becoming two nations which are the Rich and the Poor. Social
inequality would contain seeds of revolution. Hence it would be prudent to have reform to
prevent any drastic revolution. Disraeli also appealed to the morality of getting wealth and
privilege which must be accompanied by social obligation to the poor and the less well off.
This concept came to be known as One Nation.
Christian Democracy
After world war II many Christan democratic parties adopted interventionist policies. The
most significant of these parties were the Christian Democratic Union in West Germany and
Christian Democratic Party in Italy. After the war, many conservatives abandoned their
authoritarian stands and adopted the paternalistic social traditions of Catholicism. Catholic
theory focuses on social groups rather than individuals and social harmony and balance rather
than competition. Democratic corporatism was encouraged to highlight the importance of
intermediate institutions such as churches, Unions, and Business groups which are all bound
together with the notion of social partnership.
Libertarian Conservatism
Libertarian conservatism, sometimes known as conservative libertarianism, is a political
theory that blends conservatism with libertarianism, with the libertarian side of conservatism
representing the conservative wing and vice versa. Libertarian conservatism promotes
maximum economic liberty and little government control of social life, similar to laissez-faire
classical liberalism, but with a belief in a more socially conservative worldview emphasizing
authority, morality, and responsibility. Libertarian conservatism, which has its roots in the
United States, places a premium on liberty, encouraging free expression, freedom of choice,
and free-market economics to achieve conservative goals while rejecting liberal social
engineering. In the libertarian drive to minimize governmental power, libertarian
conservatism may also be defined as strengthening civil society through conservative
institutions and authority—such as family, country, church, and education.
New Right
Theorists believe that the free market is effective in achieving economic and political liberty.
The works of Hayek and the American economist Milton Friedman contain the core concepts
of the new right ideology. The new right is 'new,' but not in the sense that their ideas have
never been heard before. Indeed, they are heavily influenced by Adam Smith and closely
resemble the concerns of nineteenth-century liberal philosophy. When compared to the ‘old
right’s preoccupations with tradition, moderation, and support for the postwar political
consensus, they can only be described as ‘new’.
Hayek's early 1940s book The Road to Serfdom and his 1960 book The Constitution of
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Liberty both aimed at what he called "state socialism." Hayek associated socialism with the
central planning of the economy. He does, however, state that market processes can only
function successfully in the correct social and moral environment. To this purpose, he
emphasizes the significance of tradition in passing on the cumulative knowledge and
experience of past generations, which is paradoxically reminiscent of 'old right' thinking.
Friedman’s analysis of the assumed tradeoffs between lower unemployment and higher
inflation levels provides the theoretical foundation for the attack on trade union strength.
Friedman claimed that such tradeoffs were only conceivable in the short run. The
‘nonaccelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NAIRU), often known as the natural rate of
unemployment, is the equilibrium real wage at which the quantity of labor provided willingly
matches the amount of labor employed voluntarily by companies in the long term. As a
result, any natural rate of unemployment is frictional and structural. According to Friedman,
the latter can only be dispersed by lowering the natural rate and eliminating the institutions
that obstruct the labor supply. As a result, trade union authority is particularly targeted since
it prevents jobless people from agreeing to labor for less than the natural rate of pay. The
labor market will become more competitive and the natural rate of unemployment will
decrease only if this power is decreased.
3.7 SUMMARY
The chapter attempts to create an understanding of various political traditions that exist in
contemporary society. Any social order does not exist within a singular tradition, often
overlapping values of different traditions come together to form a plethora of socio-political
institutions. Each tradition has something to offer. Liberalism realizes the values of freedom
and the role it can play in achieving individual self-realization. Marxism attempts to
understand the cause of inequality and offers a way to rectify it. The anarchist school gives a
unique alternative to a social order which exists and maintains itself without the state and the
conservative stresses on the values of preservation of traditions and represents the continuity
of social and political order.
1. How does the positive conception of liberty differs from the negative conception of
liberty?
2. What are the different stages of class struggle according to Marx?
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3. What is the criticism of anarchist tradition? How do anarchists propose to reach their
goals?
4. What are the different schools/branches of conservatism?
5. Differentiate between the Liberal and Marxist ideas of the state.
3.9 BIBLIOGRAPHY
Education India.
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Unit 4
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES IN POLITICAL THEORY:
FEMINIST AND POSTMODERN
Meena Kumari
Assistant Professor
Miranda House
University of Delhi
STRUCTURE
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4.2 INTRODUCTION
With the advancement in science and the arrival of enlightenment it was believed that it will
lead to human emancipation. But in oppose to the universal common view critical perspective
believes that science like other forms of knowledge has also been used as an instrument of
oppression. Thus they warn against the blind faith in scientific progress and knowledge.
Critical Theory was established as a school of thought by the Frankfurt School Influenced by
Western Marxist philosophy. It has been largely drawing upon the ideas of Karl Marx and
Sigmund Freud. The primary development took place in 1930s in Germany. Major
personalities and advocates of critical perspective were Theodor Adorno, Herbert Marcuse,
Erich Fromm, Walter Benjamin and Max Horkheimer. Among them Max Horkheimer was
the first and foremost as he defined critical theory for the very first time in his essay
“Traditional and Critical Theory”. For him a traditional theory is one which only
understanding or explaining the society but a critical theory is oriented toward the critiquing
as well as changing society. So a theory can be understood as critical as far as it tries to
liberate human beings from the enslaving situations. In that sense critical theory have
emancipator tendencies.
Feminist theory and postmodernist theory have challenged the ongoing norms and tries to
rescue people out of the illusion of science and erstwhile established knowledge system.
Feminist at the one hand tries to the break the male dominance over the knowledge system
and society, postmodernists challenge the modernist claim over about the universality and
homogeneity of truth.
How many political theorists do you come across while reading your political science text
books? Probably very less number or sometimes no female at all, may be that is the reason
some feminist claimed that the history of political theory is the history of male theorist. Not
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only political theory but most of the fields are male dominated and male managed. The term
feminism first came in use during the period of 1890s. But the origin of modern feminism can
only be traced back to late seventeenth century surely not in its present form. Initially
feminist started in its liberal form and the first full expression of liberal feminism came in
Mary Wollstonecraft’s book “Vindication of the Rights of Woman” (1792). Here she claimed
that like men, women are also rational beings, hence they should be entitled to the equal
rights as per men. She challenged her contemporaries who excluded the women from
enjoying the full citizenship rights. She argued that women have the same potential for
rationality that men have and thus there is no reason why women should not enjoy the same
status that men enjoy. Nurture, not nature, argued Wollstonecraft, is the cause of gender
distinctions. Wollstonecraft criticized such appeals to the ‘natural’ differences between men
and women.
Not only women like Wollstonecraft was concerned with the equal rights for men and women
but some enlightened men like John Stuart Mill was also advocated for the same. In the
“Subjection of Women” 1869 Mill came up with full scale analysis of women’s situation and
advantages to society of giving them full legal and political equality as per with men. He
advocated this because he believes that what is now considered as the nature of women is
completely spurious and a result of a forced suppression and fabricated incitement.
4.3.1 Schools of Feminism
Feminist movement as a whole was concerned with the women rights and advocated for
equality of sexes Vis-a-Vis challenged male dominance. But did not prescribed a
universalized single path, different feminist have advocated different roots for women cause.
Broadly speaking there can be three varieties of Feminist traditions namely liberal, socialist
and radical feminism.
Liberal feminism emphasizes upon the equal worth of all individuals whether male and
female. The main focus is on achieving gender equality through political and legal
reforms within the liberal democratic framework. Liberal feminism has a great admiration
and belief for the respective laws, the political institutions and the education. As they are
among the most relevant factors of human development, the major source of inequality is the
denial of equal legal and political rights. Unlike other major brands of feminism, liberal
feminism did not undermine the existing institutions of power in liberal democratic societies
thus seems more inclusive and socially progressive. They also believed that men can be an
active participant in female struggle. As both are rational, they should be treating alike; both
can complement each other in their fight. As some of men like JS Mill, have successfully
done by advocating equal rights for women. The major feminist associated with this theory
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include Mary Wollstonecraft, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, John Stuart Mill, Helen Taylor,
and Gina Krog, Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan, Simone de Beauvoir, Rebecca Walker and
many more. The primary concern for feminists is the liberation of women and liberal
feminists believe that an enlightened version of liberalism can inspire a public philosophy
that will help in counter the present social injustices.
Many feminists believe that liberalism is the source of the problem and not the solution.
Liberal feminists initially wanted equal right as per men but treating men and women equally
leads to two problems. This sameness approach denies the very particularities of male female
difference. First while taking men as standard it undermines the idea of femaleness. A female
and male are two different categories; women’s identity cannot be compromised to attain an
equality built on the male parameters. Secondly in the process of treating female and male as
equals it fails to accept that women and men are actually different and so their problems. For
example it is women who suffer the menstrual pain, carries the physical qualities to bear a
child. Equal treatment here can be harmful to women and denied them of the maternity relief
benefits and other such policies.
Socialist feminism focuses upon the interconnection between capitalism and patriarchy as
both capitalist system of production and a gendered biased institutionalized system of
patriarchy is collectively responsible for the women’s condition. Between 1960s and 1970s
this variant of feminism has spread widely. Socialist feminists believe that financial
dependence over males is a major cause of women’s oppression and discrimination. In
capitalist system of production unequal ownership of wealth between women and men further
give a boost to male domination. In this sense subjugation of women to men is a result of
economic dependence. Gender equality can only be established by eliminating this economic
and social structure. Women's liberation here is imperative to larger quest for economic,
social and political justice. Some of main socialist feminist are Barbara Ehrenreich, Charlotte
Perkins Gilman, Johanna Brenner, Silvia Federici, Clara Fraser, Donna Haraway, Emma
Goldman and so on.
Though it did not repeat the mistake of liberal feminists who consider both men and women
equal but they too were subject to certain criticism. Alexandra Kollontai criticized the
feminists to neglect the poor working class women at the expense of upper-class bourgeois
women who were still oppressing the poor working women. So, feminist movement is
actually a movement for the so cold upper class women’s dominance over the poor lower
class women.
Radical feminism as its name suggests is a perspective which advocates for
radical reordering of a male dominated society. The male dominated society is characterized
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by the male supremacy in all social, economic and political sphere of life. Radical feminism
advocated the elimination of male’s supremacy and women's experiences should also be
count along with other divisions like race, class, and sexual orientation. They proposed that
the society is basically patriarchal based upon the women oppression by men. For this they
wanted to abolish the patriarchy to liberate women from existing social norms and
institutions. Janice Raymond, Andrea Dworkin, Catharine MacKinnon, Germaine Greer, John
Stoltenberg, Monique Wittig, Mary Daly and Robin Morgan are some important radical
feminist.
They collectively struggled against the sexual objectification of women; oppose the violence
against women in form of rape and other such crimes. They are challenging the prescribed
traditional gender role like limiting women to the household. Patriarchy is the fundamental
reason of systematic oppression and marginalization of women, it make women other.
Besides having divergence of opinion about the gender discrimination, it’s causes and the
possible routes to improve the condition, there are certain points upon which all feminists
agree. Three common points all feminist supporting are:
1. Entrenchment of Gender–Gender inequality is widespread in all societies in all
times. All feminist are in one voice confirmed that the unequal bifurcation of
individual roles on the bases of gender has been a major and common issue of
concern as this gendered division lead to long term inequality in society. Assigning
gender roles like private sphere for women (the household responsibility) and the
public sphere to men (the breadwinner of household) is problematic to all feminists.
2. Existence of Patriarchy–Patriarchy literally means ‘rule of father’. Normally it
signifies towards a condition where all necessary and relevant decisions in a family
are taken by the male member. Feminists have consensus over the existence of
patriarchy in society. Kate Millett who wrote the “Sexual Politics” (1970) portrays
patriarchy as a ‘social constant’ running through all the political, social and economic
structures. It according to her is grounded in and operates from the family which
works as a fertile ground for patriarchy. She has suggested a radical solution to
patriarchal oppression, and the solution is the abolition of conventional family system
along with consciousness-raising. Existence of patriarchy restricts women’s reasoning
and chances to participate in the decision making process, devoid them of the basic
facilities in life.
3. Need for Change–All feminists believe that there is a deep need of change in the
attitude and the manner hitherto society is running. Different path can be adopted for
the betterment of the women. It can be through revolution the idea advocated by the
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are made vulnerable through the institution of marriage. These differences between men and
women do not stem from biological differences but from unequal power relations between
male and female. All feminists are united in their concern for liberating women and adopt
diverse theoretical positions for identifying these injustices. In accordance with their findings
they present different prescriptions of what needs to be done to create a more equal society.
But some feminists oppose the sex/gender distinction. They believe that biological categories
of male and female are not as distinct as they seem. It is society, not the biology which makes
these categories so significant.
Feminist political thought has been primarily concerned with at least two issues.
First, it analyses and explains the processes, institutions and practices through which women
have been subordinated to the men. The women have been marginalized through a set of
constructed societal norms. Second, feminism is not limited to the analysis of the problem but
it also tries formulated the most appropriate and effective ways to challenge this
subordination and domination. Feminists have a firm belief that the gender is a political
construct, normally based upon stereotyping of ‘feminine’ and ‘masculine’ idea about the
gender behavior and their social roles.
To be a political theory as a ‘feminist’ theory it should be emphasizes upon the eliminating of
oppression of women by men and also by women in all forms. Feminism should not be
misunderstood as against the men as it is not against by but the male dominance over the
women or for that matter any such domination either by men or women. It is characterized by
its political stance and the attempt to advance the social role of women. They have
highlighted the problem of unequal political relationship between the sexes, the supremacy of
men in every sphere and the subjection of women in most the societies.
There is a famous saying of Karl Marx that ‘the philosophers have only interpreted the world
in various ways but the point is to change it’. The Feminism has not merely reinterpreted the
contribution of major theorists and shed new light upon established concepts such as power,
domination and equality, but also introduced a new sensitivity and language into political
theory related to ideas such as connection, voice and difference. In “Sex and Social Justice”
Martha Nussbaum defends a kind of feminism that has the following five features. First it
should be internationalist not limited to a particular region or nation, second humanist
humanity should be the highest consideration, third liberal means advocating equal rights for
all, four the concern with the social shaping of preference and desire and finally the concern
for sympathetic understanding.
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Table-1
Modernism Postmodernism
that suggests that society’s up gradation towards any kind of development, progress or
coherence.
It is characterized by straight repudiation of the common philosophical viewpoints that were
not much challenged during the 18th-century enlightenment age. Postmodernist roots are
developed on the denial and opposition of the modernist land.
1. At the very first place it challenged the modernist claim that there is an objective
natural reality. Postmodernists called this idea as a kind of void realist ideal.
2. Unlike modernist claim reason and logic are not universally valid like laws and
domain of knowledge are the same for everyone or let’s say apply equally. Instead for
postmodernists whether it is reason or logic they are merely conceptual constructs and
only valid within the established set of intellectual traditions in which they often used.
3. Modernist believes that the human nature is derived from the birth itself rather than
learned or induced through social forces. Postmodernists rather insist that almost all
aspects of human psychology are wholly socially determined.
4. The explanatory and descriptive statements of historians and scientists can be
objectively true or false in the principle. But the post modernists have denied the
possibility of any such truth.
5. Modernists believe that human beings for the better are likely to change themselves
and their societies through the use of reason and logic, and through more specialized
scientific tools. For them it is reasonable to anticipate that subsequent societies will be
more just full, more humane, more enlightened and more prosperous, in away
somewhat better than from what they are now. But postmodernists have no such faith
in science and technology as a tool of human progress and an enlightened society.
6. It is possible for modernist to construct general theories that can explain several
aspects of the natural and social world within a given realm of knowledge for example
a general theory of human history in form of dialectical materialism. Postmodernists
have denied any such possibility.
7. Human beings are capable of acquiring knowledge about natural reality, and on the
basis of evidence and certain founded principles, this knowledge can be ultimately
justified. Postmodernists reject this kind of philosophical foundationalism.
4.4.4 Faucault and Derrida
Though Michel Foucault has declined, he is considered as one of the important
postmodernist. He defined the post modernism through two guiding concepts: the power and
the discourse. For example, the criminality discourse reflects the people’s view in a certain
society about crime and this is the discourse through which the power works. Power as per
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4.5 SUMMARY
Thus postmodernists regard their theoretical position as uniquely inclusive and democratic,
because it allows them to recognize the unjust hegemony of Enlightenment discourses over
the equally valid perspectives of non elite groups. In the 1980s and ’90s, academic advocates
on behalf of various ethnic, cultural, racial, and religious groups embraced postmodern
critiques of contemporary Western society, and postmodernism became the unofficial
philosophy of the new movement of “identity politics.”
Postmodernist believes that there is no absolute or universal truth and the truth changes with
the advent of new events and discoveries. It means that scientific events that took place
historically on one side of the world have influenced political and social events that are now
taking place on another. It embraces and encourages individual expression, the cross-cultural
dialogue and debates as a necessary factor.
4.7 BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Unit 5
THE IDEA OF POLITICAL COMMUNITY:
POLITICAL OBLIGATION
Mitalee Mahapatra
Research Scholar
University of Delhi
STRUCTURE
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5.2 INTRODUCTION
The concept of political obligation is often inferred as the commitment or duty to act in a
particular way. As per, H.L.A Hart (The Concept of Law,1961), there are two kinds of
obligation- ‘being obliged’ to do something, which includes an element of coercion, and
‘having an obligation’ to do something, which implies only a moral duty. Thus, political
obligation is one of the most contested issues of political theory and philosophy. Following of
duties such as of payment of taxes, political participation and voting, military services etc. are
a part of legal obligation which are often backed by punitive actions, however, duties such as
keeping a promise and obliging by it is sustained by my moral obligations. Political theorists
have dwelled around the concept of obligation primarily with the question of how much, how
far, when and why an individual is obliged to obey the law and commands of political
authority. This question is so complex that it is not possible to find its definite answer which
would be universally acceptable. However, an inquiry into different viewpoints expressed in
this behalf can enlighten us in finding an answer to this problem in a particular context.
Almost every thinker has meddled with the concepts revolving around “political obligation”,
beginning with Hobbes and later on Austin who mainly focused on the grounds of political
obligation and called for absolute obligation to the “command of the sovereign”. On the other
end, Locke was possibly the first thinker to reject this absolutist view and to postulate 'rights'
of the individual against the state. Perhaps, this is the reason Locke is regarded as the pioneer
of individualism which later developed into liberalism. Kant further on evolved the concept
of 'human dignity'. J.S. Mill made an attempt to explore the limits of political obligation by
describing the conditions of the state’s intervention. Rousseau and Hegel on different grounds
carried forward the Hobbesian legacy of absolute political obligation. John Rawls advances
on the Kantian notion of 'rational negotiators' to build his theory of justice. While on the other
side, Marx sought to annihilate political obligation by identifying a man's position in the
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social class, and projected the working class as an instrument of revolution. Finally, Neo-
Marxists have been looking for alternative instruments as well as alternative strategies of
revolution. In a nutshell, political philosophy mainly resided on the logic of the grounds and
limits of political obligation.
Obligation and duty have a lot in common. There isn’t anything that distinguishes the two.
Between the two, there is a strong analytical relationship. Obligation and duty are often used
interchangeably. To be obligated means to have a responsibility; to fulfil a responsibility
means to fulfil an obligation. In this context, a duty is the conception of a behaviour as the
subject of legal obligation. When we say that someone is performing their responsibility, we
often mean that they are obligated to do something. As a result, it is apparent that an
obligation cannot exist without a will that imposes a responsibility or an obliging will.
Because there are so many distinct kinds of obligations, there is a chance that they will
conflict with one another. A moral commitment may clash with a legal obligation; and
political legitimation may clash with a religious one. Any endeavour to find a solution may
elicit or include major moral dilemmas. A conflict between a legal requirement and a political
commitment may appear to be less likely, but a conflict between a moral obligation and
political obligation can, and typically is a real one. For example, my moral obligation to assist
an accident victim by rushing him to the hospital may conflict with my legal obligation to
follow the traffic rules. Similarly, compulsory immunization or say sterilisation might be an
act of political obligation, however as a religious obligation may claim an almost opposite
act. Where do we stand when several obligations come into conflict with one another is a
more essential concern (and this is exact about the various kinds of duties). Are we to attend
to a particular type of obligation while ignoring the others? To be just to these numerous
types of obligations or duties, one must attend to these various forms of obligations or duties
and its extremely rare that one does not. It is quite rare that one likes to sacrifice/ignore one at
the expense of the other. Political obligations may be more demanding at times, it may seek
immediate rectification, for fear of punishment or otherwise, than other types of obligation.
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who command compliance of their followers not because of any divine origin but because of
their personal qualities like personality, oratory skills, presentation etc. Moreover,
charismatic authority is entirely personal which may wither away with the disappearance of
the person holding such qualities. But divine rights theory admits to 'traditional authority'
rather than charismatic authority. The theory denies the right to resist against the state or the
authority by the people, hence it is anti -thetical to a democracy.
5.4.3 Prescriptive Theory
As per this theory, political authority and its respect are based on the principle of “customary
rights”. Authority is legitimate, if it is endorsed by customs or tradition. For the instance the 7
rounds of hindu marriage legitimizes a marriage because the authority is derived from
traditions and customary rules. The people follow the commands of their rulers because the
fact of compliance has become like a well-established convention. The conservatives view
the state as a fragile structure built over a long period of time representing a balance of
differing and contrasting interests. Institutions like the state evolve gradually, adapt slowly to
change and transform over a period of time; hence, it is a matter of duty to accept state
authority and obey it while working only for gradual peaceful change. This conservative
theory of political obligation finds its existence in the writings of Hegel, who believed that
ideas of morality evolve concretely in the customs and institutions of the state. Further, since
the state is the incarnation of time tested customary morality, it becomes the duty of every
citizen to follow what the state expects from one. An eminent scholar of this school of
thought is, the English Parliamentarian Edmund Burke, he states that it is unwise for a person
to totally disregard custom and tradition. Political obligation is contained in paying constant
respect to tradition, which is a sacrosanct concern. Thus, Burke extended his support the
English colonialist in the revolt of American independence, as he was in the favour of
traditional rights of Englishmen, on the other hand he opposed the French Revolution as it
was stirred by the abstract rights of man completely disjointed from the national traditions.
Prof. M. Oakeshott, another conservative philosopher, believed that political activities can
never be anything other than conventional, because political contemplation cannot exist prior
to political action. Politics is a skill that requires more practise than theoretical maxims,
algorithms or systems to master. As a result, even when we try to understand other people's
views, we are constantly working inside our own framework. In a nutshell, Political authority
is based on principle of established customary right. The person who obey customs also obey
the rules because the fact of obedience has become like a well-established convention.
political authority is legitimate, if it is approved by custom.
The prescriptive theory has its own set of flaws. The basic foundations of political duty is
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based on adhering to the existing established practices and conventions. However, there is
scope for its abolition also as per the demand and need of the society. People seek change,
and if their aspirations are not fulfilled, they turn to revolution. Prof. Oakeshott has been
chastised for seeing even revolutions as historical events, therefore reducing them to strictly
cons derivative matter. This means that the proponents of this school of thought even urge to
accept the traditional practise of racism, that is the indigenous population of African and
Latin American countries must accept racial discrimination legislation as “valid”, because
they are based on best available evidence. Similarly, Sati and genital mutilation is also
justified on the grounds of traditions. However, this is far from the reality, people only
observe their traditions, in so far as they have their utility and do away with them when they
become redundant or useless.
Depending on source of obligation and the position of individual in society, different thinkers
agrue for different kind of obligation.
5.5.1 Principle of Consent
Some theories advocate man to be master of his will, hence any sort of obligation can only be
inflicted upon him by his consent. There is no acceptance for a coercive imposition of an
obligation by an authority. Individual's consent is the proper source of political obligation.
Substantiating Hobbes and Locke who claimed that in the state of nature there were certain
inconveniences being faced by man due to the absence of the existence of clear laws and
authority. Thus, state was created when man agreed to enter into contract where all gave their
consent to give up some amount of liberty for the establishment of an authority to maintain a
peaceful society. Thus, it is the moral and political obligation of the individuals to obey laws,
Leslie Green (Green, 2004) explains, “In Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, and Kant, we discover
that many variations on the statement that our duties to law are determined by some kind of
individual agreement, whether expressive or tacit. Promises, contracts, oaths, and vows all
fall into this general area. In its central meaning, consent of these sorts is not only voluntary,
it is performative: it is given with the intent of changing the rights, duties, powers, or
liabilities of another, and it succeeds in part because it is known to be done with that
intention”. In other words, a government can exercise its power only with an explicit or
implicit consent of its citizens. Some thinkers argue that if an individual accepts the political
authority of the land and abides by the set laws, his tacit consent may be taken for granted.
Others hold the view that mere recognition of a legitimate authority is not enough to explain
the source of political obligation: it must be proved that people themselves created that
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authority with their consent. Thereby, the theory of ‘Social Contract” substantiates the fact
that the authority was given as well as created through a consent. The chief exponents of the
theory of the social contract are: Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679), John Locke (1632-1704), and
Jean Jaques Rousseau (1712-78). These thinkers have claimed a 'state of nature', that is a
hypothetical stage to exist before the creation of political authority. Social contract represents
the method whereby an agreement is reached at for the creation of a state-which has both
legitimacy as well as authority. The social contract is responsible for transition from a state of
nature to a civil society. The terms of the contract define the ground and limits of political
obligation.
Hobbes equates in his Leviathan life in a state of nature as “solitary, poor, brutish and short, it
was absolute anarchy where “might is right” was the rule of the day. It was a state of war of
each against all, and hence fraught with insecurity. Man decided to thereby surrender all their
natural rights to the newly created political authority—the sovereign (Leviathan). This
surrender was final and unchangeable, because any departure from this position would result
in the return to the state of nature. Although Hobbes advocates an unlimited political
obligation, yet it is solely based on consent; not imposed from above.
On the other hand, Locke had a more optimistic view regarding the state of nature. He
believed man to be rational by nature, who is generally inclined to follow the rules of
morality. Hence the state of nature was a state of “peace, goodwill, mutual assistance and
preservation.” The acceptance of the social contract led to the establishing of a civil society
through a mutual consent of the people only to deal with the few law breakers who could not
be allowed to be the judge of their own case. Under the social contract, man surrenders the
right to be the judge in his own case in lieu of an assurance that the state will be responsible
for the protection of his natural right to 'life, liberty and property'. Government is, therefore,
created as a trust which can be dissolved if it fails to perform this function. Accordingly,
Locke upholds a limited political obligation and acknowledges individual's right to resistance
and revolution.
In his Discourses and Social Contract, the state of nature, for Rousseau, was a peaceful and
morally neutral condition in which self-contained individuals acted according to their basic
urges as well as their natural desire for self-preservation- when man was close to nature and
enjoyed the beauty and bounty of nature without any restriction. However, as the population
expanded, there also emerged a scarcity of resources which brought a sense of insecurity
when “natural liberty” ceased to be a source of constant happiness. This led to a conflict
between individual’s actual will (guided by his immediate interests) and real will (motivated
by his ultimate interest which coincided with the interest of the community). In order to
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overcome this conflicting situation, men entered into the social contract by placing
themselves under the direction and control of the “general will” which represented the
convergence of the real will of all members of the community, thereby replacing their natural
liberty by civil liberty which provided for an effective preservation and security of their
possessions. Rousseau, therefore advocated absolute sovereignty and unlimited political
obligation. The social contract involves the total alienation of each associate from the entire
community, including all of his rights. As there is no associate over whom he does not
acquire the same rights as he yields over himself, he receives an equivalent for whatever he
loses, and an increase of force for the maintenance of what he has. However, this obligation
is not owed to any external authority, it represents the consent or agreement of an individual
to subordinate his individual will to general will. This subordination is not contrary to his
freedom. That is why Rousseau postulated that 'man can be forced to be free'.
In a nutshell, although all the three established a civil society with the state or the government
given the responsibility and authority to preserver the life of the people, Locke alone
postulates a conditional consent; hence he clearly creates a limited political obligation.
Hobbes and Rousseau postulate unconditional consent and absolute sovereignty. They seem
to create an unlimited political obligation. But since this obligation is based in their consent,
and it is intended to serve their interest, it cannot be treated as unlimited in the true sense. The
contract theory, as advocated by the contractualists, especially Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau,
offers that obligation of the people to obey the government is guided by the fact that we have
entered into a contract to do so.
Though evolved in the seventeenth and the eighteenth centuries, the consent theory has its
relevance even now. Its significance lies on the account of constituting the moral basis of a
democratic order, however like every other theory, the consent theory also suffers from
certain weaknesses. The theory contemplates the state as an artificial institution. Furthermore,
the element of consent as postulated in the contract made in a hypothetical state of nature is
nothing more than a fiction, hence, not legally binding on the existing generation. Thus, the
people may go to the level of staging a rebellion in response to a plea demanding that they
withdraw their consent in cases when the government has done so in contravention of the
“general will’. The result is that the theory of political obligation is converted into a theory of
rebellion. People submit to the laws of the state, because the contract demands from them a
compulsion that they are legally bound to comply with the orders issued by the state. This
theory forms a legal relationship between the rulers and the ruled, binding the former to rule
the latter, binding the latter to obey the former. Non-compliance is not an option under this
theory, rather non-compliance is met with punishment. The concept of once-for-all consent is
not a sound basis of political obligation. A consent based government must be reliant on the
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continuous consent of a vigilant electorate or those who have agreed be governed by it. In
this light Locke's formulation of the social contract may be considered sound in this light.
5.5.2 Idealist Theory
An idealistic view of political authority may involve a serious deviation from a realistic
position. The Idealists believe that the man’s innate natural rationality is the source of
political obligation. Man is seen as a ‘political and rational creature’ and the state as a ‘self -
sufficient community’ that encompasses the entire society. The idealists school of thought,
whose one of the proponents was Hegel initially created an unconditional and unlimited
obligation, but later it was modified by scholars like T.H Green. According to Hegel, the state
as 'the incarnation of divine reason' and the 'march of God on earth'. He argued that when
individual obeys the state, he basically follows divine reason and thereby exercises his
freedom. As a result, no anti-thesis between the state and the individual may exist. As a
result, by accepting, the state’s orders, each individual can seek his best possible development
in the society on his own. In other words, allegiance to the state is the basis of political
obligation. Hegel has carried on the legacy developed by Plato and Aristotle whereby they
had agreed that the state and the people who make it up “form an organic totality”. He
therefore, advocated an unlimited political obligation without drawing a clear distinction
between the state and government.
It was T.H. Green who declared that government cannot claim an unconditional and absolute
obedience of its citizenry. He went on to say that individual owes his allegiance to the
society, and neither to the state nor to the government. He proposes that only those actions
should be made into obligations, which are made to further a certain moral end. Accordingly,
the organized power of society should be acknowledged as political authority for the purpose
of determining political obligation. He pointed out it is not the state, but the society which is
the pivot of the common good. Hence, allegiance is to the society. T.H Green embodies man
and women as self-conscious beings who have an aspiration to realize the good which they
comprehend along with other members of the community. The concept of common good not
only comprehends the good of all members of the community (collective good), but their
origins of the common good are also alike. In his Lectures on the Principles of Political
Obligation (1882) he postulated that the state itself is indebted to promote the common good
as conceived by its citizens, and that individual is obligated to obey only those laws which
will promote the common good. Thus, it is the common good is the guiding force for
generating compliance. He further accepts disobedience by the individuals, if they think that
they will serve the cause of the common good by defying any command of the state.
He goes on to conclude that individuals carryout their responsibilities and duties as members
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of a society and not for individual advantages because they realize that their self-interest
truely lies in the common good. It is the consciousness of the common good which prompts
human beings to embrace their duties. He reduces the state to an instrument of protecting the
common good as conceived and defined by its citizens. By distinguishing the organized
power of the community from the state as the, Green rules out the claim of any government to
demand unconditional allegiance from its citizens. Likewise, Harold J. Laski (1893-1950)
also rejected unconditional obedience to any government by drawing a dichotomy between
the state and government. He stated that if a government claims obedience of its citizenry, it
will have to compete with other human associations (church, school, community etc) in
securing their highest welfare.
The idealistic theories have been critiqued on the ground of being too abstract. It places
regular and everyday things in a highly philosophical or metaphysical forms that are beyond
the understanding of an average man. Furthermore, the concept of political obligation
encompasses not just the man’s obedience to the state, but is also inherently connected with
his right to resist an abusive political authority. In their notion of political obligation, the
idealists are hesitant to accommodate the right to resistance in their doctrine of political
obligation. Even if Green and Bosanquet recognised the right in certain exceptional or rare
circumstances, their treatment is vague and imprecise and they are unable to shake off the
influence of English liberalism. Trietschke even goes to the extent of saying to worship the
state and kneel down in front of it. Thus, the idea of political obligation is renewed into the
inoculation of blind worship of the authority.
Certain theories are completely against political obligation in any form. These theories
advocate the means and the end of unjust and unfair law.
5.6.1 Marxist View
Marxism postulates state does not represent the organised power of the community, rather it
represents the organised power of the dominant class- particularly the class owning the major
means of production. Its sole purpose is the welfare of the bourgeoisie class; helping the
strong competitors to increase their wealth and power by exploiting the weak competitors as
well as the dependent class and not general welfare. In such a class divided society the
individuals can not have any obligation towards the state. At best, an individual can have any
or some obligation towards its society, provided it is a classless and stateless society. Till
such a society comes into existence, we can only think of worker's obligation towards its own
working class. Under the capitalist system, where those having the means of production and
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exploiters of the working class are in power, the worker has obligation 'against the state'. The
obligation is to show solidarity with the working class in order to generate a strong
organization for revolution against the capitalist regime and end the exploitation.
A careful examination of Marxian thought reveals that it approaches the question of political
obligation in a way that is quite far away from real perspective. What is empathetically
prompted in the phase of capitalism is categorically denied in the latter stage of social
development. People who are encouraged to disobey the bourgeoisie state are instructed not
to disobey the state at all after the establishment of a new social system. As a result, Marx is
accused of constructing up a theory of political obligation solely on the basis of expediency,
and he thereby, ignores the independent individual whose experience only matters in the
determining his allegiance to the laws of the state. Marxian thought has also been criticised
on the ground that a change accompanied by chaos and confusion is most likely to be
exploited by anti-social elements. If old order is destroyed arbitrarily without leaving the
foundations for the construction of a new order, the result would be disastrous, because, to
destroy is easy, to reconstruct is difficult. Thus, a revolution has both pros as well as cons.
5.6.2 Anarchist View
The anarchist view argue for a stateless society, simply put a society without any
government. Anarchism is usually placed on the extreme-left of the political spectrum. They
advocate for the removal of all organised authority and state apparatus in order to create a
society in which all human beings can live freely, peacefully and happily without requiring
any form of external force to regulate their interactions. Anarchists like P.J. Proudhon (1809-
65) and Peter Kropotkin (1842-1921) stated, the state is a coercive entity and hence all
governmental authority is illegitimate and hence its presence is suited only to a corrupt and
unmerited society. The individual is only obligated to uphold justice, thus he is obliged to
resist the state and devote himself to build a new institution where all members of society will
cooperate with each other.
5.6.3 Gandhian Perspective
The Indian National Movement witnessed the tacit use of principle of civil disobedience
indicating the recognition of severe limits of political obligation by Gandhi. Civil
disobedience implies deliberately disobeying an unjust authority and breaking an unjust law.
Civil disobedience may be resorted to as a protesting a government policy which is unjust or
to raise the government’s attention to a need for political reform. It serves both a means and
an end to an unjust and unfair law. Originally, the word was coined by American writer
Henry David Thoreau, who attempted to explain the reason for his refusal to pay taxes to the
state for several years for which he was also imprisoned through an essay in 1848. He argued
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that citizens must protest and show discontent against any injustice committed by their own
government. An example of this is the case of 'conscientious objectors' to military service
during the period of the First World War (1914-18), who was awarded rigorous punishment
for refusing to render military service as they believed in peaceful solution of all human
disputes as highlighted by Harold J. Laski.
Mahatma Gandhi collaborated the principle of civil disobedience with the principle of non-
violent struggle and satyagraha throughout the freedom struggle. Gandhi set a practical
example of civil disobedience first through the Champaran satyagraha and later on the 1930s
famous civil disobedience movement to break the salt law. The ban (ban on manufacture of
salt by Indians) imposed by the British which was thought to be unjust by Gandhi and his
followers. He firmly believed that civil disobedience was based on a profound respect for law
in general; only unjust law should be overturned—that, too, when all attempts of persuasion,
negotiations and petition for its amendment or withdrawal of such law had failed.
Gandhi was of the belief by any form of resistance against injustice must be non-violent,
hence the act of civil disobedience should also be performed non-violently and in full public
view; and penalties caused by such an act should be accepted willingly. It is again important
that the true object of civil obedience is 'change of heart' of the authorities concerned-moral
awakening. Civil disobedience is a weapon only against a tyrannical regime, autocratic,
unjust government or a foreign rule. If a government wilfully preserves the citizens' rights
and can be influenced through democratic means, resort to civil disobedience will not be
compulsory. lastly, an act of civil disobedience should not be resorted to for demanding the
rights or privileges of any particular section against the general or public interest.
5.7 SUMMARY
moral or legal obligation. The concept of legal obligation merely serves to safeguard the
existing established legal structure, however, the concept of political obligation serves to
protect the system as a whole against dictatorship, political disputes, totalitarianism, injustice,
exploitation and alike. How to construct a legitimized political or social order is the problem
of political duty? Political responsibility is a form of obligation that aims to develop a
political system that is free of all types of injustices and promotes the general good. Political
justice does not totally fall under the purview of either the law or ethics. Its domain that exists
somewhere between ethics and law. It is what is connected to its foundations (why obey?)
and substance (as to what it contains so that it is obeyed).
5.9 BIBLIOGRAPHY
• Green, L. (2004). Law and Obligations. In K. E. Jules L. Coleman (Ed.), The Oxford
Handbook of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law (pp. 525-528). New York:
Oxford University Press.
• Harris, P. (1990). On Political Obligation. Routledge.
• Horton, J. (1992). Political Obligation. Macmillan.
• Kelly, D. B. (Ed.). (1994). The Social Contract from Hobbes to Rawls. Routledge.
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