Michael Oakeshott on Authority, Governance, and the State presents contributions on one of the most important British philosophers of the 20th century. These essays address unique and under-analyzed areas in the literature on Oakeshott: authority, governance, and the state. They draw on some of the earliest and least-explored works of Oakeshott, including his lectures at Cambridge and the London School of Economics and difficult-to-access essays and manuscripts. The essays are authored by a diverse set of emerging and established scholars from Europe, North America, and India. This authorial diversity is not only a testimony to the growing international interest in Oakeshott, but also to a plurality of perspectives and important new insights into the thought of Michael Oakeshott.

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Michael Oakeshott on Authority, Governance, and the State
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© The Author(s) 2019
Eric S. Kos (ed.)Michael Oakeshott on Authority, Governance, and the StatePalgrave Studies in Classical Liberalismhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17455-2_11. Introduction
Eric S. Kos1
(1)
Department of Political Science, Siena Heights University, Adrian, MI, USA
One can fairly say, interest and scholarship on Michael Oakeshott has become a global phenomenon. In the decades since his death, Oakeshottâs work has been translated into Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and I am aware of one attempt to publish an essay in Serbian. Scholarship is also conducted all over the world, as the most recent volumes on Oakeshott attest, 1 and is conducted in many languages. What remains more elusive is explaining these phenomena. A recent commentator has noted how value in philosophy, as in art, is very personal; âalways a matter of inner conviction, of immediate and sincere acknowledgement of the quality of thought displayed.â 2 I suspect many first-time readers find in Oakeshottâs writings what Oakeshott himself thought was a product of liberal learning: âthe ability to detect the individual intelligence which is at work in every utterance.â 3 That is, many find Oakeshottâs writings irresistibly profound and erudite without sacrificing accessibility, eloquence, and style. Yet, his work did not initially meet a uniform and positive reception. Part of the reason may be his approach was not in step (deliberately I suspect) with his contemporaries, as many commentators have noticed. His approach to political philosophy clearly made his originally published readings confusing and misunderstood to some. The attraction continues, however, to new students far beyond Anglo-American circles, which is striking for a thinker who is in so many ways quintessentially English. The essays here help explain this broadening interest, for they explore new materials available to students of Oakeshott, they engage many of the perennial but universal themes in political philosophy that Oakeshott himself found of interest, and they contribute to both contemporary academic debates and to more practical political concerns.
Many of these essays draw on newly accessible materials. Oakeshottâs early lectures at Cambridge, the lectures he developed at the London School of Economics in the 1950s that became a long-running seminar, the many unpublished works (essays and notebooks), and hard to access publications and book reviews have become more readily available due largely to the energies of Luke OâSullivan. 4 These works are important not only because they often contain different iterations of Oakeshottâs ideas in his originally published work, but also because they allow one to follow the development of Oakeshottâs thought both in terms of what interested and concerned him, and how his thinking on particular matters evolved. A number of authors below have taken up these early materials to show Oakeshottâs continuing and evolving interest in particular ideas.
The ideas taken up here (authority, governance, the state) have been an inextricable part of the study of politics since the earliest of times and have remained a source of controversy and learning. Their centrality to the field makes clarity in these matters essential, and Oakeshottâs contribution to this ongoing study has been significant for its unconventional perspective and its historical sensitivity. Oakeshott is unique in concluding the state is not a static structure to behold, but is historically emergent and, as such, dynamic and evolving. Oakeshott, as many of the essays below explore, understands the modern state as a tension between two different visions, each rooted in a particular moral practice and set of ideas. The implications of this idea of the state ripple out into other areas. Oakeshottâs views on governance and authority are nuanced and depend on his focus. When theorizing civil association, for example, governance is about attending to non-instrumental rules that sustain conditions of civility, and authority is rooted in acknowledged procedures to promulgate law. When theorizing the modern European state, he recognizes governance and authority are a messier mixture of policy goals and procedures, of power and legitimacy. His views here offer novel, refreshing, controversial, and fruitful perspectives on these important political concepts.
Controversy continues in contemporary debates in political theory. One such issue involves the authority of the state in the modern worldâa world increasingly characterized by plurality and individualism. David Boucher has characterized the issue variously as the âdepoliticization of politicsâ and âthe crisis of our times.â 5 The question here is to what extent a stateâs authority rests on compatriots united in common cause, a position identified with Carl Schmitt, and to what extent can non-coerced adherence of citizens rest on a process of decision-making, a position attached to Oakeshott. For Oakeshott, the state reveals itself historically as an unresolved tension between the two, but theoretically as an ideal of civil association. A related issue involves the character of the rule of law. If the rule of law is a primary function of the state and is valued in part for its non-instrumental character (that it helps solve disputes through set procedures and practices, when it is recognized substantive appeals cannot be universalized) is and can the rule of law be neutral, or does it necessarily promote a substantive end? That is, how does one understand the seeming non-instrumental nature of the rule of law and the challenge liberal realism poses that the rule of law can never be neutral? Readers will need to decide themselves, but the essays here help readers clarify the questions and the possible responses. These are not just academic questions.
The theoretical questions raised here have immediate bearing on our contemporary situation. As I write, the world seems to be experiencing the resurgence of a particular form of statism, where increasingly the exercise of state power is justified and consolidated, in populist fashion, on the basis of achieving particular policy outcomes. Politically, citizensâ allegiance is pinned to satisfying citizensâ desires; and the state becomes merely an instrument to achieving those desires, authority slowly evaporates, governance becomes management of resources and people, and long-standing institutions (like the rule of law, constitutional provisions, and political norms), that have given structure and pattern to how the arrangements of society are attended to historically, have become casualties to putative progress. The questions here have existential importance, as our understandings of authority, governance, and the state influence their functioning in the world.
Each of the essays below addresses these questions, sometimes explicitly, sometimes implicitly, with new and interesting answers. Arguing that references to âthe stateâ are an attempt to strip metaphor out of politics, Alexander convincingly shows that the adoption of the term âthe stateâ amounts to a triumph of vacuous neutrality. In tracing various definitions of the state, Alexander not only clarifies the ways Oakeshott himself used the term and how that usage changed over time, but also highlights the more fruitful approach Oakeshott takes in âtheorizingâ and describing the modern European stateâa task made easier with the newly accessible Oakeshott materials. The approach is to see the state and its authority as historically emergent; an approach that puts flesh back on the stripped-down state and allows Oakeshott to more successfully bridge the modern gap between freedom and authority with history and tradition.
Browning addresses the philosophical and historical approaches Oakeshott uses, especially in On Human Conduct, to argue the image of conversation Oakeshott invokes to characterize the relationship between these two explanatory modes imagines them more separated than in fact they are. The separation, and even irrelevance to one another, implied by conversation cannot be sustained even in Oakeshottâs own work. The Lectures are examined as an example of how history and philosophy are intertwined. Philosophersâ questions grow out of historical contexts, the history of political philosophy requires philosophical expertise to be told, and philosophy itself is a historically emergent and changing practice.
Taking up the question of what grounds the authority of the state, and as a partial answer to the question of how political the state is, Corey investigates modern theories of the character of the liberal political order and finds that legitimating theories of the liberal state fall into consent theories, benefits theories, and theories of procedural fairness. He shows them all to be philosophically wanting. The problem, as Corey sees it, is some theoretical justifications work, however philosophically flawed, as long as citizens donât push too hard for their political demands. The concern is that when modern pluralism and intense partisan conflict confront an increasingly powerful state, it becomes more apparent to citizens that there are winners and losers in the political process. This undermines the philosophically shaky, de facto legitimacy the modern state rests upon. The Oakeshottian formulation of that state as a civil association, with its more limited scope and power, is more compatible with these contemporary conditions and the continuing necessity for obedience and some form of legitimacy. A certain abandonment of authority, in recognition that politics will necessarily involve illegitimate exercises of power, compels the deliberate limiting of centralized power. An interesting question this essay raises is whether Oakeshottâs concern was over the lack of an adequate philosophical justification of the exercise of power or whether he was more worried about the implications of mistaking questions of legitimacy with questions of policy.
The relationship between the rule of law, which a state as a civil association requires, and our other liberal commitments, like taking rights seriously, is the central concern of Fullerâs essay. Three theorists of law (Ronald Dworkin, Michael Oakeshott, and John Finnis) exemplify different understandings of this relationship. Dworkinâs attempt to defend both trans-political rights and the general community welfare is imagined to transform âthe political into the consensual, without resort to significant coercion,â through the agency of the ideal judge. Dworkinâs ideal judge is seen by him to be in a better position to determine the fundamental principles in the existing legal arrangements and either protecting rights or âevolvingâ those rights in light of progress toward the general, communal welfare. Here the aim of social progress and taking rights seriously takes priority over the rule of law. Oakeshottâs view is shown to reverse the priority. The rule of law is a moral relationship, a practice, that doesnât have a specifiable end like protecting rights or making progress toward the just society. Rather, the only ideal association, compatible with free individuals and capable of unanimous subscription to, is not a relationship in terms of an extrinsic goal, but a relationship in terms of a manner or practice of making decisions; of authority; of acknowledging the right of whatever constituted authorities are recognized in a community. John Finnis offers a third perspective that seeks to navigate the arbitrary imposition of one groupâs preferences and pure proceduralism, by seeing law and rights through the vantage point of the universal desire for human flourishing and identifying the principles and variables that contribute to human flourishing. This is a natural law perspective that recognizes a universal desire for human well-being that prompts individuals to both articulate and make defensible choices in light of shared and acknowledged goods. Individual choice reflects the universal desire to live well. Rights are an expression of the recognition that every individualâs well-being must be considered. The rule of law is the technical expression of this respect, a respect which relieves neither the individual nor the community of continual judgment and moral responsibility.
Almeida traces Oakeshottâs understanding of the state as a tension through its various iterations, from earlier essays to the one in On Human Conduct, with the aim of showing the compatibility of the authority of the state and the freedom of the modern individual. Modern freedom is analyzed in Oakeshottâs thought. The absence of concentrations of power, that Oakeshott insists are a necessary condition for freedom, reflect a debt to Burke and to Locke. Oakeshott is drawn to Burkeâs idea that power is distributed across past, present, and future, and to the elements in Lockeâs view of limit governmental power, like the division of powers and the rule of law. Almeida sees this combination resulting in a conservative perspective and a liberal outlook for Oakeshott. Civil association and the rule of law are shown to be the most compatible with these conditions of freedom.
Rudinsky examines the points of agreement and divergence between Oakeshott and the Cambridge School, in particular J. G. A. Pocock and Quentin Skinner. Pocock found Oakeshottâs writings on tradition useful and developed them as a methodological starting point of his historical inquiries. In particular, Oakeshottâs central idea that theorizing was an abstract abridgment of a concrete manner of living was self-consciously adopted by Pocock, as was Oakeshottâs critical claim that not all reflection on politics is the same, but there are levels or varieties of reflection on politics. Pocock rejects Oakeshottâs claims regarding the non-practical nature of historical inquiry as âantinomian and anarchicââthe reaction of conservatives answering radical historians. Skinner too shares the view that practice precedes theory, as well as the conviction that the modern state was constructed out of the remnants of the medieval world. However, where Skinner relies on a Weberian view of the state, Oakeshott resisted monolithic definitions of the state and, as we have seen, characterized the modern European state as an unresolved tension. Oakeshottâs and Pocockâs view that there exist many types of reflection on politics, have both rejecting the reduction of all political thought to political ideology, unlike Skinner who concluded there was ânothing but the battle.â
In Sevenâs essay, Oakeshott is initially situated in the objectivist versus relativist framework (placing him in the relativist camp), and in particular he is identified with the realism as reimagined by Bernard Williamsâa realism that provides a guide to collective human action, but not from a viewpoint external to the social and political world. The essay is no mere attempt at classification, but rather, is a thoughtful engagement with Oakeshottâs unique position that takes the form of an analysis of the ways in which Oakeshott has affinities with and diverges from the framework that dominates analytic schools of political philosophy. A threefold taxonomy of realists (as opposed to moralists) is developed that helps one think through how Oakeshott imagines the task of governing in the contemporary world. Oakeshottâs view of the manner of governing in the contemporary world, exhibited most fully in the essay âThe Politics of Faith and the Politics of Skepticism,â 6 is argued to be a sober yet optimistic one.
Horcher investigates Oakeshottâs early lectures and an under-explored lecture on conservatism to show the connection between his view of the state and his peculiar brand of conservatism. The lectures reveal the significant historical origins of the ideal types Oakeshott laid out in On Human Conduct. The distinction between teleocratic and nomocractic views of rule is laid out with historical examples to show Oakeshottâs disposition toward a politics of moderation. The particular understanding of human nature in the essay on conservatism is shown to be an importa...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Front Matter
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The State Is the Attempt to Strip Metaphor Out of Politics
- 3. The Problem of Liberal Political Legitimacy
- 4. Oakeshott on the State: Between History and Philosophy
- 5. Taking Natural Law Seriously Within the Liberal Tradition
- 6. The Authority of the State and the Traditional Realm of Freedom
- 7. Anarchic and Antinomian? Oakeshott and the Cambridge School on History, Philosophy, and Authority
- 8. Michael Oakeshottâs Political Realism
- 9. Government as a British Conservative Understands It: Comments on Oakeshottâs Views on Government
- 10. Global Governance and the âClandestine Revolutionâ: From the Legal State to the Judicial State
- 11. Three Different Critiques of Rationalism: Friedrich Hayek, James Scott and Michael Oakeshott
- Back Matter
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