Ockham, Hobbes und die Geburt der säkularen Normativität

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Ockham, Hobbes und die Geburt der säkularen Normativität

Zur Genese von Säkularität, Individualität und Rationalität in Recht und Moral

Ekardt, Felix; Richter, Cornelia

From the journal ARSP Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie, Volume 92, December 2006, issue 4

Published by Franz Steiner Verlag

article, 8779 Words
Original language: German
ARSP 2006, pp 552-567
https://doi.org/10.25162/arsp-2006-0038

Abstract

This article examines the rise of modern secular, individualistic and rational legal thought from a historical point of view. It will be argued that the well known assumption needs to be critized, that the philosophical background of this development can only be traced back to Hobbes, Locke and Kant. Instead, the two authors of this article will point out that it was rather Ockham who first mentioned notions of modern liberal democracy in his philosophical opus. Furthermore, it will be shown that the traditional interdisciplinary discourse on Thomas Hobbes falls short of a serious discussion of the most critical arguments. On a normative level it will be asked, what a Hobbesian (or for example Kantian discourse-ethical) conception can do for a normative justification of liberal democracy, nationally and transnationally.

Author information

Felix Ekardt

Cornelia Richter