Leo Strauss - Strauss On Politics

Strauss On Politics

Part of a series on
Conservatism
Schools
  • Compassionate
  • Cultural
  • Fiscal
  • Green
  • Liberal
  • Libertarian
  • National
  • New Right
  • One nation
  • Progressive
  • Religious
  • Social
  • Traditionalist
Concepts
  • Tradition
  • Social norm
  • Natural Law
  • Family Values
  • Social Order
  • Social Hierarchy
  • Private Property
People
  • Edmund Burke
  • Joseph de Maistre
  • Louis de Bonald
  • Adam Müller
  • François Chateaubriand
  • Leopold von Ranke
  • Nikolay Karamzin
  • Juan Donoso Cortés
  • Jaime Balmes
  • Benjamin Disraeli
  • Hippolyte Taine
  • Orestes Brownson
  • Louis Veuillot
  • Frédéric le Play
  • Konstantin Leontiev
  • Gustave Le Bon
  • Maurice Barrès
  • Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo
  • George Santayana
  • Othmar Spann
  • Winston Churchill
  • Charles Maurras
  • Ivan Ilyin
  • Oswald Spengler
  • Henri Massis
  • Carl Schmitt
  • Ramiro de Maeztu
  • Michael Oakeshott
  • Arnold Gehlen
  • Peter Viereck
  • Russell Kirk
  • Leo Strauss
  • Nicolás Gómez Dávila
  • Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn
  • Robert Nisbet
  • Roger Scruton
  • Olavo de Carvalho
Organizations
  • International Democrat Union
  • International Young Democrat Union
  • Asia Pacific Democrat Union
  • European People's Party
  • European Democrats
  • AECR
  • List of conservative parties
Religious
  • Low Church Anglicanism
  • Christian Right
  • Jewish Right
  • Hindu Nationalism
  • Islamism
  • Traditionalist Catholics
Related topics
  • Agrarianism
  • Aristocracy
  • Capitalism
  • Carlism
  • Center-right
  • Corporatism
  • Conservative Revolution
  • Counter-revolutionary
  • Monarchism
  • Neo-liberalism
  • New Right
  • Reactionary
  • Right-wing politics
  • Toryism
  • Conservatism Portal
Politics portal

According to Strauss, modern social science is flawed because it assumes the fact-value distinction, a concept which Strauss finds dubious, tracing its roots in Enlightenment philosophy to Max Weber, a thinker whom Strauss described as a "serious and noble mind.” Weber wanted to separate values from science but, according to Strauss, was really a derivative thinker, deeply influenced by Nietzsche’s relativism. Strauss treated politics as something that could not be studied from afar. A political scientist examining politics with a value-free scientific eye, for Strauss, was self-deluded. Positivism, the heir to both Auguste Comte and Max Weber in the quest to make purportedly value-free judgments, failed to justify its own existence, which would require a value judgment.

While modern liberalism had stressed the pursuit of individual liberty as its highest goal, Strauss felt that there should be a greater interest in the problem of human excellence and political virtue. Through his writings, Strauss constantly raised the question of how, and to what extent, freedom and excellence can coexist. Strauss refused to make do with any simplistic or one-sided resolutions of the Socratic question: What is the good for the city and man?

Read more about this topic:  Leo Strauss

Famous quotes containing the words strauss and/or politics:

    Ah, there should be a young man, ein schone Junge carrying Blumen, a bouquet of roses. There should be cold Rhine wine and Strauss waltzes, and on the long way home kisses in the shadow of an archway, like a Cinderella.
    Laurence Stallings (1894–1968)

    Our family talked a lot at table, and only two subjects were taboo: politics and personal troubles. The first was sternly avoided because Father ran a nonpartisan daily in a small town, with some success, and did not wish to express his own opinions in public, even when in private.
    M.F.K. Fisher (1908–1992)