Istvan Meszaros

  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    The ultimate explanatory ground of separate/alienated political decision-making across history—in other words, its transhistorically recurrent and reimposed causal foundation—is the expropria tion of surplus-labor in class society.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    That must be the structurally entrenched, at all cost enforced, and in every possible way secured, precondition for the ongoing reproduction of all such society.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    The same determination also happens to be the principal reason why at times of major periodic crises and even the “overthrow” of any one of the forms of such society, only the “change in personnel” prevails.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    In Bobbio’s view, Marx and subsequent Marxian theorists, such as Lenin, Luxemburg, and Gramsci, had developed criticisms of the capitalist state from the standpoint of the human “subject,” but their analysis displayed a lack of consideration of concrete “institutions” and the nature of the state under socialism.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Further, the Marxian argument on the “withering away” of the state was seen by Bobbio as lacking any contemporary significance
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Italian Marxist Lucio Colletti, decrying the “lack of a theory of the socialist state or socialist democracy as an alternative to the theory, or theories of the bourgeois state and bourgeois democracy.”
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Nevertheless, insofar as the latter argued that a Marxian theory of the state was not even possible in principle, since downplaying the rule of law and of institutions was inherently authoritarian, Bobbio, according to Mészáros, simply betrayed his own deep-seated view that the state as a modern entity was exclusively a liberal-democratic phenomenon (196–97).19

    Bobbio

  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Liberal-democratic approaches to the state, associating it with the rule of law (and right), failed to acknowledge the state’s own lawlessness, that is, the frequent transgressions of its own rules, in a situation in which there was no
    higher authority.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    For Barker, “The state is essentially law, and law is the essence of the state,” defined by their mutual relation.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    The state is simply a group or association, like any other, generated by society through voluntary association, but with the specific, higher purpose of promoting law based on the higher authority or sovereignty conferred on the state.23
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