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Eric Voegelin

Eric Voegelin (born Erich Hermann Wilhelm Vögelin, German: [ˈføːgəliːn]; January 3, 1901 – January 19, 1985) was a German-American political philosopher. He was born in Cologne, and educated in political science at the University of Vienna, where he became an associate professor of political science in the law faculty. In 1938, he and his wife fled from the Nazi forces which had entered Vienna. They emigrated to the United States, where they became citizens in 1944. He spent most of his academic career at Louisiana State University, the University of Munich and the Hoover Institution of Stanford University.

Eric Voegelin

Erich Hermann Wilhelm Vögelin

(1901-01-03)January 3, 1901

January 19, 1985(1985-01-19) (aged 84)

Early life[edit]

Voegelin was born in Cologne on January 3, 1901. His parents moved to Vienna in 1910, and he eventually studied at the University of Vienna. The advisers on his dissertation were Hans Kelsen and Othmar Spann. After his habilitation there in 1928, he taught political theory and sociology. In Austria, Voegelin began lasting friendships with Alfred Schütz[4] and with F. A. Hayek.[5]

Career[edit]

As a result of the Anschluss in 1938, Voegelin was fired from his job. Narrowly avoiding arrest by the Gestapo and after a brief stay in Switzerland, he arrived in the United States. He taught at various universities before he joined Louisiana State University's Department of Government in 1942. Voegelin remained in Baton Rouge until 1958, when he accepted an offer by Munich's Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität to fill Max Weber's former chair in political science, which had been unoccupied since Weber's death in 1920. In Munich, he founded the Institut für Politische Wissenschaft. Voegelin returned to the United States in 1969 to join Stanford University's Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace as Henry Salvatori Fellow. There he continued his work until his death. He was a member of the Philadelphia Society.[6]


Although some have found his books obscure, according to his student Ellis Sandoz, he was a "wonderfully lucid lecturer with the gift of explaining with complete intelligibility the most abstruse theories to the comprehension and fascination" of his students.[7]

The first is the belief that the disorder of the world can be transcended by extraordinary insight, learning, or knowledge, called a Gnostic Speculation by Voegelin (he claimed that the Gnostics themselves referred to that as ).

gnosis

The second is the desire to implement and or create a policy to actualize the speculation, or : to create a sort of heaven on earth within history.

Immanentize the eschaton

Reception[edit]

Eugene Webb criticized Voegelin's conception of gnosis and his analysis of Gnosticism in general. In the article "Voegelin's Gnosticism Reconsidered," Webb explained that Voegelin's concept of Gnosticism was conceived "not primarily to describe ancient phenomena but to help us understand some modern ones for which the evidence is a great deal clearer."[20] Webb continues, "the category (of Gnosticism) is of limited usefulness for the purpose to which he put it… and the fact that the idea of Gnosticism as such has become so problematic and complex in recent years must at the very least undercut Voegelin's effort to trace a historical line of descent from ancient sources to the modern phenomena he tried to use them to illuminate."[20]


Because Voegelin applied the concept of gnosis to a wide array of ideologies and movements such as Marxism, communism, National Socialism, progressivism, liberalism, and humanism,[21] critics have proposed that Voegelin's concept of Gnosis lacks theoretical precision.[22][23] Therefore, Voegelin's gnosis can, according to the criticis, hardly serve as a scientific basis for an analysis of political movements. Rather, the term "Gnosticism" as used by Voegelin is more of an invective just as "when on the lowest level of propaganda those who do not conform with one's own opinion are smeared as communists."[24]

Über die Form des amerikanischen Geistes, Tübingen 1928

Rasse und Staat. , Tübingen 1933

Mohr Siebeck

Die Rassenidee in der Geistesgeschichte von Ray bis Carus. Berlin 1933

Junker & Dünnhaupt

Der autoritäre Staat, Wien 1936

Die politischen Religionen. , Stockholm 1939.[25] Neuauflage München 1996

Bermann Fischer

The New Science of Politics. An Introduction, Chicago University Press, Chicago 1952

Order and History, 5 Bde. Baton Rouge 1956–1987

Wissenschaft, Politik und Gnosis, München 1959, English translation: Science, Politics and Gnosticism, Regnery Publishing Inc., Washington DC, 1968

Anamnesis. Zur Theorie der Geschichte und Politik, München 1966

From Enlightment to Revolution, Durham 1975

Autobiographische Reflexionen, Hg. . München 1994

Peter J. Opitz

Das Volk Gottes. Sektenbewegungen und der Geist der Moderne, München 1994

Der Gottesmord. Zur Genese und Gestalt der modernen politischen Gnosis, München 1999

Ordnung und Geschichte, 10 Bde. Hg. & Peter Opitz, München 2001–2005

Dietmar Herz

Die Neue Wissenschaft der Politik, München 2004

Anamnesis. Zur Theorie von Geschichte und Politik, Freiburg 2005

Das Drama des Menschseins, Passagen, Wien 2007  978-3851657241

ISBN

Das Jüngste Gericht Friedrich Nietzsches. Matthes & Seitz, Berlin 2007,  978-3882218879

ISBN

Conversations with Eric Voegelin, Mitschrift von vier Vorlesungen in Montreal in den Jahren 1965, 1967, 1970, 1976. Thomas More Institute, Montreal 1980

Briefwechsel 1939–1949: Eric Voegelin und Hermann Broch, In: , S. 149–174

Sinn und Form, Heft 2/2008

Briefwechsel, Eric Voegelin und , In: Sinn und Form, Heft 6/2007, S. 764–794

Karl Löwith

Realitätsfinsternis. Übers. Dora Fischer-Barnicol, Hg. und Nachwort Peter J.Opitz. Matthes & Seitz, Berlin 2010  978-3882216967

ISBN

Was ist Geschichte? Übers. Dora Fischer-Barnicol, Hg. und Vorwort Peter J.Opitz. Matthes & Seitz, Berlin 2015  978-3882210460

ISBN

Glaube und Wissen. Der Briefwechsel zwischen Eric Voegelin und von 1934 bis 1964. Hg. Peter J. Opitz; Wilhelm Fink, München 2010 ISBN 978-3770549672

Leo Strauss

Luther und Calvin. Die große Verwirrung. Hg. Peter J. Opitz. Wilhelm Fink, München 2011,  978-3770551590

ISBN

Die Natur des Rechts. Übers. und Nachwort Thomas Nawrath. Matthes & Seitz Berlin, Berlin 2012,  978-3882216172

ISBN

Leo Strauss

Further reading[edit]

Primary literature[edit]

All of Voegelin's writing is published as his Collected Works (CW), reviewed by Mark Lilla, "Mr. Casaubon in America" The New York Review of Books 54/11 (June 28, 2007): 29–31.

Quotations related to Eric Voegelin at Wikiquote

at Internet Archive

Works by or about Eric Voegelin

at the Hoover Institution Archives

Eric Voegelin papers

Eric-Voegelin-Archiv

The Eric Voegelin Institute, LSU

The Centre of Eric Voegelin Studies (EVS), Ghent University

Eric Voegelin Study Page

Voegelin—Research News

Eric Voegelin-Bibliothek at FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg (Eric Voegelin Library)