The Writing and Society Research Centre and Philosophy @ UWS present:

Daniel McLoughlin, University of New South Wales, Faculty of Law.

TITLE: Sovereignty, Economic Theology, and the Early Modern State.

DATE/TIME: Wed, May 14th. 3.30-5.00

PLACE: University of Western Sydney, Bankstown Campus, Building 3, Room 3.G.27  
[How to get to Bankstown 
Campus]<http://www.uws.edu.au/campuses_structure/cas/campuses/bankstown>

ABSTRACT:
In his 'Monotheism as a Political Problem,' the theologian Erik Peterson 
develops a devastating critique of Carl Schmitt’s Political Theology.  The 
modern notion of sovereignty cannot, he argues, be a secularisation of the 
theological notion of a singular and omnipotent lawgiver because the Christian 
God is threefold: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  Giorgio Agamben’s The Kingdom 
and the Glory rescues Schmitt from Peterson’s critique by showing that the 
fundamental task of Trinitarian theology has always been to reconcile the 
singularity and  multiplicity of God – or, to put this in more political terms, 
his sovereignty over the world with his government of the world.  According to 
Agamben, then, the political paradigm that Christian theology transmits to 
modernity is that of a ‘bipolar machine’ comprised of a transcendent 
sovereignty and a governmental praxis that puts this sovereign will into 
effect.  Agamben’s own analysis of the secularisation of this paradigm focuses 
upon its influence on the emergence of liberal democratic ideas such as 
Rousseau’s general will and Adam Smith’s invisible hand.   This paper develops 
an analysis of a piece of political history, which is largely missing from 
Agamben’s work, by using his account of the bipolar machine as a lens through 
which to read Schmitt’s concern with the theological inheritance of the early 
modern sovereign state.  The paper begins by outlining Agamben's reading of 
Trinitarian theology, before examining the relationship between this 
theological legacy and the modern theory of sovereignty, and illustrating the 
intimate relationship between sovereignty and government in the account of 
monarchical absolutism developed by Schmitt and Foucault.


BIO: Daniel is Vice-Chancellor's Post-Doctoral Fellow in the Faculty of Law at 
the University of New South Wales. He holds a PhD in Philosophy from UNSW and a 
Bachelor of Arts/Law from Macquarie University. Before joining the University 
of New South Wales, he worked as a lecturer in the Adelaide Law School, 
University of Adelaide. Daniel is a legal theorist working in the critical and 
continental traditions of thought. He has published on sovereignty, political 
ontology, government, and political crises, with a particular emphasis on the 
work of Giorgio Agamben and Carl Schmitt. His other research interests include 
Marxist state theory, the politics and theory of human rights, public law 
theory, and the impact of neo-liberalism on the state. He is currently 
completing a book manuscript on Agamben's legal and political thought. His 
post-doctoral research project is entitled ‘Liberalism, The Politics of 
Emergency and the Crisis of Law’ and draws on Schmitt, Foucault and Marx to 
theorise the relationship between crisis politics, the neo-liberal state, and 
the transformation of the legal order.


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Dr Jessica Whyte
Senior Lecturer in Cultural and Social Analysis
Parramatta Campus, EQ.1.31
University of Western Sydney
Locked Bag 1797
Penrith  NSW  2751
AUSTRALIA
http://www.uws.edu.au/hca/school_of_humanities_and_communication_arts/key_people/academic_staff_directory/doctor_jessica_whyte
http://uws.academia.edu/JessicaWhyte
http://www.sunypress.edu/p-5759-catastrophe-and-redemption.aspx
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