Loja de Ideias

And the dreamers? Ah, the dreamers! They were and they are the true realists, we owe them the best ideas and the foundations of modern Europe(...). The first President of that Commission, Walter Hallstein, a German, said: "The abolition of the nation is the European idea!" - a phrase that dare today's President of the Commission, nor the current German Chancellor would speak out. And yet: this is the truth.

Ulrike Guérot & Robert Menasse

quarta-feira, maio 20, 2009

Gostava de ter escrito isto: Jacques Maritain on Right and Left

I recently found a beautifully pithy formulation of the difference between Left and Right in Jacques Maritain's The Peasant of the Garonne (1968, tr. De Brouwer):

"The pure man of the left detests being, always preferring, in principle, in the words of Rousseau, what is not to what is. [footnote by J.M.: "What is not is the only thing that is beautiful," said Jean-Jacques Rousseau. And Jean-Paul Sartre: "The real is never beautiful."] The pure man of the right detests justice and charity, always preferring, in principle, in the words of Goethe (himself an enigma who masked his right with his left), injustice to disorder. Nietzsche is a noble and beautiful example of the man of the right, and Tolstoy, of the man of the left. (pp. 21-22.)"

Maritain is of course speaking of ideal types. No sane political philosophy could be purely leftist or purely rightist in the above senses. But it is useful to have the extremes of the spectrum so clearly delineated, especially since political opponents love to paint each other as extremists.

Maverick Philosopher

Diogo Moreira à(s) 6:46:00 da tarde
Partilhar

Sem comentários:

Enviar um comentário

‹
›
Página inicial
Ver a versão da Web

Contribuidores

  • Diogo Moreira
  • José Reis Santos
  • Patrícia Castelo
  • Paulo Dias
  • Unknown
Com tecnologia do Blogger.