Enemy and War in Carl Schmitt’s Political Theory
Enemy and War in Carl Schmitt’s Political Theory
Author(s): Jan KujawskiSubject(s): Political Philosophy, Political Theory, Political history, Contemporary Philosophy, Peace and Conflict Studies
Published by: Collegium Civitas
Keywords: history of social thought; political philosophy; history of political thought; political theology;
Summary/Abstract: The subject of the following article are the basic concepts present in Carl Schmitt’s political theory: concepts of enemy and war. The concept of the enemy is defined in the first part of the work in the context of coexistence with the concept of friend as the fundamental opposite of the theory of politics. The next part of the essay defines the concept of war, and then describes the right to war (ius belli) as a special right of the state. The last part of this paper deals with the particular concept of enemy, the internal enemy.
Journal: Zoon Politikon
- Issue Year: 11/2020
- Issue No: 11
- Page Range: 29-41
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English