LAW, PRINCIPLE, AND THE THEOLOGICO-POLITICAL HISTORY OF SOVEREIGNTY

被引:1
|
作者
Nahme, Paul E. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kansas, Smith Hall,300 Oread Ave, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA
[2] Univ Kansas, Religious Studies, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA
关键词
canon law; Cicero; decision; law; natural law; papal monarchy; Peterson; Plato; principle; Roman law; sovereignty; Schmitt;
D O I
10.1179/1462317X13Z.0000000009
中图分类号
B9 [宗教];
学科分类号
010107 ;
摘要
This article takes it cue from the debate between Carl Schmitt and Erik Peterson regarding the possibility of political theology within Christianity, and in response, offers a conceptual-historical portrait of sovereignty and its juridical dimensions. Beginning with the introduction of Roman law into the medieval Church, the article traces the logic of "legal principle" as the basis of sovereign decision and how the form of legal distinctions adopted into canon law translate the Romanitas of law into the theory of papal sovereignty. By the Romanitas of law, that is to say the principle of sovereignty in law. The article then seeks to describe the conceptual translations of Roman politics and Stoic metaphysics into theological form and the logic of this translation into medieval natural law. The article concludes by evaluating how the civic theology of Rome is conceptually inherited by the politics and legal framework of sovereignty and returns to Peterson's critique of Schmitt, arguing that political theology can be understood as a dynamic where politics is theologized, assuming that in the history of religion, theology and politics are never fully distinct to begin with.
引用
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页码:432 / 479
页数:48
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