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Volumn 62, Issue 1, 2000, Pages 77-105

Leo Strauss's indictment of Christain philosophy

(1)  Merrill, Clark A a  

a NONE

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EID: 34248095559     PISSN: 00346705     EISSN: 17486858     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1017/S0034670500030254     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (11)

References (112)
  • 1
    • 77954070206 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • There is a case to be made that, by setting out clearly and publicly a criticism that Strauss intentionally left implicit, I am engaging in a morally suspect project. It is possible I am doing a disservice both to politically responsible Jewish and Christian believers and to political philosophers. George Grant, one of Strauss's most gifted Christian readers, declined to write publicly about Strauss's criticisms of Christian philosophy, 27 December 1983, ed. William Christian and Sheila Grant (Toronto: University of Toronto Press
    • There is a case to be made that, by setting out clearly and publicly a criticism that Strauss intentionally left implicit, I am engaging in a morally suspect project. It is possible I am doing a disservice both to politically responsible Jewish and Christian believers and to political philosophers. George Grant, one of Strauss's most gifted Christian readers, declined to write publicly about Strauss's criticisms of Christian philosophy. See letter to Ed Andrew, 27 December 1983, in The George Grant Reader, ed. William Christian and Sheila Grant (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1998), p. 267.
    • (1998) The George Grant Reader , pp. 267
    • Andrew, E.1
  • 2
    • 77954065169 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Have been encouraged to disregard Grant's judicious caution by the example of Thomas Aquinas who was not afraid to set out objections to his own positions and even to orthodox belief, often stating those arguments with greater clarity and force than the opponents who actually espoused them. The accusations set out below may be viewed as three extended objections opening an article headed "Whether There Is a Christian Philosophy?" As such, they invite an answer and replies from the heirs of St. Thomas
    • Have been encouraged to disregard Grant's judicious caution by the example of Thomas Aquinas who was not afraid to set out objections to his own positions and even to orthodox belief, often stating those arguments with greater clarity and force than the opponents who actually espoused them. The accusations set out below may be viewed as three extended objections opening an article headed "Whether There Is a Christian Philosophy?" As such, they invite an answer and replies from the heirs of St. Thomas.
  • 4
    • 77954045543 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Also published in Interpretation 7, no.3 (1978): 1-3. Cf. Leo Strauss, The City and Man (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1964), p. 9
    • Also published in Interpretation 7, no.3 (1978): 1-3. Cf. Leo Strauss, The City and Man (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1964), p. 9.
  • 7
    • 0004152043 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • One can find in numerous places in Strauss's writings a similar complaint against those who misunderstand classical philosophy because they make the mistake of reading it through the lens of Christian scholastic concepts. For one of the most extensive passages on this subject. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
    • One can find in numerous places in Strauss's writings a similar complaint against those who misunderstand classical philosophy because they make the mistake of reading it through the lens of Christian scholastic concepts. For one of the most extensive passages on this subject, see Leo Strauss, Persecution and the Art of Writing (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988), pp. 8-9.
    • (1988) Persecution and the Art of Writing , pp. 8-9
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 8
    • 0010205031 scopus 로고
    • Trans. Eve Adler (Albany: State University of New York Press)
    • See also Leo Strauss, Philosophy and Law, trans. Eve Adler (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1995), p. 73.
    • (1995) Philosophy and Law , pp. 73
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 9
    • 77954060464 scopus 로고
    • How to Begin to Study Medieval Philosophy, ed. Thomas L. Pangle (Chicago: University of Chicago Press
    • "How to Begin to Study Medieval Philosophy," The Rebirth of Classical Political Rationalism, ed. Thomas L. Pangle (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989), p. 221.
    • (1989) The Rebirth of Classical Political Rationalism , pp. 221
  • 10
    • 77954075900 scopus 로고
    • On a New Interpretation of Plato's Political philosophy
    • "On a New Interpretation of Plato's Political philosophy," Social Research 13, no.3 (1946):328.
    • (1946) Social Research , vol.13 , Issue.3 , pp. 328
  • 11
    • 77954058347 scopus 로고
    • Das Heilige
    • Finally, there is a curious passage in a very early work where Strauss hails Nietzsche as the first modern thinker who drew aside the curtain of Christian thought to reveal a way back, not only to a clear vision of medieval Jewish philosophy, but also to a true reading of the ancients. Judaism, according to Strauss, can benefit from "the critique of culture by Nietzsche, who attempted to descend toward the pre-'Christian' depths of the Jewish spirit as well as of the Greco-European spirit."
    • Finally, there is a curious passage in a very early work where Strauss hails Nietzsche as the first modern thinker who drew aside the curtain of Christian thought to reveal a way back, not only to a clear vision of medieval Jewish philosophy, but also to a true reading of the ancients. Judaism, according to Strauss, can benefit from "the critique of culture by Nietzsche, who attempted to descend toward the pre-'Christian' depths of the Jewish spirit as well as of the Greco-European spirit." "Das Heilige," in Der ]ude 7, no 4 (1923): 241
    • (1923) Der ]Ude , vol.7 , Issue.4 , pp. 241
  • 12
    • 0010787385 scopus 로고
    • Leo strauss and maimonides
    • Quoted and translated, Boulder and London: Lynne Riener
    • quoted and translated by Remi Brague, "Leo Strauss and Maimonides," in Leo Strauss's Thought: Toward a Critical Engagement (Boulder and London: Lynne Riener, 1991), 104.
    • (1991) Leo Strauss's Thought: Toward A Critical Engagement , pp. 104
    • Brague, R.1
  • 13
    • 77954041966 scopus 로고
    • Leo Strauss 1899-1973
    • Laurence Berns who speaks from long personal acquaintance as Strauss's student and colleague tells us that Strauss. " insisted that strictly speaking there is no such thing as Jewish philosophy." , first appeared in The College, January 1974 (a publication of St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
    • Laurence Berns, who speaks from long personal acquaintance as Strauss's student and colleague, tells us that Strauss "insisted that strictly speaking there is no such thing as Jewish philosophy." Laurence Berns, "Leo Strauss 1899-1973," The Independent Journal of Philosophy 2 (1978): 2, first appeared in The College, January 1974 (a publication of St. John's College, Annapolis, MD).
    • (1978) The Independent Journal of Philosophy , vol.2 , pp. 2
    • Berns, L.1
  • 14
    • 84859865389 scopus 로고
    • How to begin to study the guide of the perplexed
    • ed. Shlomo Pines (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press. Cf. Strauss, Persecution, pp. 19. 43,104-105
    • Cf. Leo Strauss, "How to Begin to Study The Guide of the Perplexed," in Moses Maimonides, The Guide of the Perplexed, ed. Shlomo Pines (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1963), p. xiv. Cf. Strauss, Persecution, pp. 19. 43,104-105.
    • (1963) Moses Maimonides, the Guide of the Perplexed
    • Leo Strauss, Cf.1
  • 15
    • 0004152043 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The title of this essay, it seemed advisable to use the term Christian philosophy instead of Christian scholasticism to alert readers to the broad implications of Strauss's critique. In the text, I have followed Strauss's terminology
    • Strauss, Persecution and the Art of Writing, pp. 8-9. In the title of this essay, it seemed advisable to use the term Christian philosophy instead of Christian scholasticism to alert readers to the broad implications of Strauss's critique. In the text, I have followed Strauss's terminology.
    • Persecution and the Art of Writing , pp. 8-9
    • Strauss1
  • 16
    • 0003687723 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Chicago: University of Chicago Press
    • Leo Strauss, Natural Right and History (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1953), p. 163.
    • (1953) Natural Right and History , pp. 163
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 19
    • 84875325723 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid. HI, Q. 94, a. 1
    • Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae I, Ibid., HI, Q. 91, a, 2; Q. 94, a. 1.
    • Summa Theologiae i , vol.91 , pp. 2
    • Aquinas, T.1
  • 20
    • 84937315669 scopus 로고
    • Natural law as 'law': Reflections on the occasion of 'veritatis splendor,'
    • Russell Hittinger, "Natural Law as 'Law': Reflections on the Occasion of 'Veritatis Splendor,'" The American Journal of Jurisprudence 39 (1994): 14.
    • (1994) The American Journal of Jurisprudence , vol.39 , pp. 14
    • Hittinger, R.1
  • 23
    • 77954082242 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Note
    • Kalam refers to a kind of speculative or theoretical thought that does not take theory as its chief goal but rather aims at the defense of religion. The term originally described the teachings of Muslim dialectical theologians who attempted to construct a rational defense of religion. One of the chief parts of this Islamic science or kaldm was a teaching known in the Christian tradition as natural law. The capacity of human reason to prescribe rational laws for the attainment of human happiness is incorporated, as in Plato's Laws, into a theology of divine providence, which lends the rational laws a weight of moral obligation that they would not otherwise possess. The theologians' science of kalam elevates the rational laws to the status of rational commandments. Islamic philosophers, such as Alfarabi, however, adapted this theological apologetics and made it continue to perform its function of rational persuasion, but now in the service of philosophy. Thus, we must distinguish a philosophic kaldm from the original theological kaldm.
  • 26
    • 77954043130 scopus 로고
    • Criticism: Sixteen appraisals
    • Chicago: University of Chicago Press
    • Cf. Leo Strauss, "Criticism: Sixteen Appraisals," What Is Political Philosophy? (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1959), p. 285.
    • (1959) What Is Political Philosophy? , pp. 285
    • Leo Strauss, Cf.1
  • 28
    • 34248099896 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Leo Strauss's confrontation with max weber: A search for a genuine social science
    • Strauss's thesis regarding Christian scholasticism's responsibility for modern philosophy's submission to popular opinion is summarized
    • Strauss's thesis regarding Christian scholasticism's responsibility for modern philosophy's submission to popular opinion is summarized by Nasser Behnegar, "Leo Strauss's Confrontation with Max Weber: A Search for a Genuine Social Science," Review of Politics 59, no.1 (1997): 118n56.
    • (1997) Review of Politics , vol.59 , Issue.1 , pp. 118-156
    • Behnegar, N.1
  • 29
    • 77954053708 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Strauss, therefore, suggests that the Scholastic synthesis of philosophy and Christian revelation was really an attempt to resolve the conflict in favor of revelation. It was on account of this attempted resolution that philosophy first lost its character as a way of life and became an instrument or a department, a view which has survived scholasticism and continues to obscure the conflict between philosophy and revelation." Behnegar also makes a useful distinction between a political philosophy that makes itself useful to politics and a political philosophy that becomes confused with politics
    • "Strauss, therefore, suggests that the Scholastic synthesis of philosophy and Christian revelation was really an attempt to resolve the conflict in favor of revelation. It was on account of this attempted resolution that philosophy first lost its character as a way of life and became an instrument or a department, a view which has survived scholasticism and continues to obscure the conflict between philosophy and revelation." Behnegar also makes a useful distinction between a political philosophy that makes itself useful to politics and a political philosophy that becomes confused with politics.
  • 30
    • 77954067634 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ad. 1; 88 and a. 3, c , ad. 2
    • Aquinas, Summa Theologiae I-IL Q. 97, a. 2, ad. 1; 88 and a. 3, c , ad. 2.
    • Summa Theologiae I-IL , vol.97 , pp. 2
    • Aquinas1
  • 35
    • 77954082711 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Summa Contra Gentiles I, 4
    • Summa Contra Gentiles I, 4
  • 36
    • 0004258578 scopus 로고
    • For an excellent overview of Christian philosophy and for an elegant argument in favor of the very possibility of a Christian philosophy. Notre Dame, IN, and London: University of Notre Dame Press, first published 1936), esp. chapter two
    • For an excellent overview of Christian philosophy and for an elegant argument in favor of the very possibility of a Christian philosophy, see Etienne Gilson, The Spirit of Mediaeval Philosophy (Notre Dame, IN, and London: University of Notre Dame Press, 1991, first published 1936), esp. chapter two.
    • (1991) The Spirit of Mediaeval Philosophy
    • Gilson, E.1
  • 38
    • 77954073521 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Summa Theologiae I-II, Q. 2-5
    • Summa Theologiae I-II, Q. 2-5.
  • 39
    • 77954046490 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Q.I, a. 7; Q. 5, a. 1
    • Aquinas, Summa Theologiae I-II, Q.I, a. 7; Q. 5, a. 1.
    • Summa Theologiae , vol.1-2
    • Aquinas1
  • 40
    • 77954056034 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The correspondence between man's mundane good, which can be known by natural reason, and his ultimate, supernatural end, which requires the supplement of revelation, is inherent in the relationship that Aquinas asserts between the natural law and the eternal law
    • The correspondence between man's mundane good, which can be known by natural reason, and his ultimate, supernatural end, which requires the supplement of revelation, is inherent in the relationship that Aquinas asserts between the natural law and the eternal law.
  • 41
    • 77954069611 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Q. 91, a. 1 and 2; Q. 93, a. 3 and 6
    • See Aquinas, Summa Theologiae I-II, Q. 91, a. 1 and 2; Q. 93, a. 3 and 6;
    • Summa Theologiae , vol.1-2
    • Aquinas1
  • 42
    • 77954078464 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Summa Contra Gentiles I, 7
    • Summa Contra Gentiles I, 7.
  • 43
    • 77954041009 scopus 로고
    • Restatement on Xenophon'sHz'ero
    • Ed. Victor Gourevitch and Michael S. Roth (New York: The Free Press)
    • Cf. Strauss, "Restatement on Xenophon'sHz'ero," in On Tyranny, ed. Victor Gourevitch and Michael S. Roth (New York: The Free Press, 1991), p. 184.
    • (1991) On Tyranny , pp. 184
    • Strauss, Cf.1
  • 44
    • 77954070961 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • One must be careful not to confuse the judgment of Platonic political philosophy that political life and moral opinions constitute perhaps the most fascinating and urgent objects of philosophical investigation with any kind of admission, on the part of the philosopher, that his study of political life in any way implies that political life can be made philosophical or can be somehow reconciled or combined with philosophy
    • One must be careful not to confuse the judgment of Platonic political philosophy that political life and moral opinions constitute perhaps the most fascinating and urgent objects of philosophical investigation with any kind of admission, on the part of the philosopher, that his study of political life in any way implies that political life can be made philosophical or can be somehow reconciled or combined with philosophy.
  • 46
    • 0010792651 scopus 로고
    • The mutual influence of theology and philosophy
    • Section III of "Progress and Return," from which this quote is taken, appeared originally as
    • Section III of "Progress and Return," from which this quote is taken, appeared originally as "The Mutual Influence of Theology and Philosophy," The Independent Journal of Philosophy 3 (1979): 111-118
    • (1979) The Independent Journal of Philosophy , vol.3 , pp. 111-118
  • 47
    • 3142754653 scopus 로고
    • Jerusalem and Athens
    • Chicago: University of Chicago Press
    • Leo Strauss, "Jerusalem and Athens," Studies in Platonic Political Philosophy (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983), pp. 167-168
    • (1983) Studies in Platonic Political Philosophy , pp. 167-168
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 48
    • 77954054670 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Liberal education and responsibility
    • Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press
    • See also Leo Strauss, "Liberal Education and Responsibility," in Liberalism Ancient and Modern (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press), pp. 19-20.
    • Liberalism Ancient and Modern , pp. 19-20
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 51
    • 0347830550 scopus 로고
    • Correspondence concerning modernity: Karl Lowith and Leo Strauss
    • Cf. letter to Karl Lowith (15 August 1946)
    • Cf. letter to Karl Lowith (15 August 1946) in "Correspondence Concerning Modernity: Karl Lowith and Leo Strauss," The Independent Journal of Philosophy 4 (1983): 107.
    • (1983) The Independent Journal of Philosophy , vol.4 , pp. 107
  • 52
    • 77954075017 scopus 로고
    • Trans. Robert Bartlett, Interpretation, (Fall). Christian scholasticism did not heed what both Plato's and Xenophon's Socrates learned about the "limitation of reason and of speech generally." The scholastics did not understand the political necessity for Socrates to become friends with Thrasymachus
    • See Strauss, "Some Remarks on the Political Science of Maimonides and Farabi," trans. Robert Bartlett, Interpretation 18, no 1 (Fall 1990): 9. Christian scholasticism did not heed what both Plato's and Xenophon's Socrates learned about the "limitation of reason and of speech generally." The scholastics did not understand the political necessity for Socrates to become friends with Thrasymachus.
    • (1990) Some Remarks on the Political Science of Maimonides and Farabi , vol.18 , Issue.1 , pp. 9
    • Strauss1
  • 53
    • 77954045542 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The problem of socrates
    • The Christian understanding of man tends to be apolitical
    • See Strauss, "The Problem of Socrates," inRebirth of Classical Political Philosophy, p. 159. The Christian understanding of man tends to be apolitical.
    • Rebirth of Classical Political Philosophy , pp. 159
    • Strauss1
  • 55
    • 77954066370 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See, for example, Ephesians 2:11-16
    • See, for example, Ephesians 2:11-16.
  • 56
    • 0010396494 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The problem of socrates
    • Strauss specifically states that the deliberate cultivation of patriotism (love of the patria) is part of the noble lie
    • Strauss, "The Problem of Socrates," in Rebirth of Classical Political Rationalism, pp. 158-159 Strauss specifically states that the deliberate cultivation of patriotism (love of the patria) is part of the noble lie.
    • Rebirth of Classical Political Rationalism , pp. 158-159
    • Strauss1
  • 57
    • 77954038245 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ronald Beiner argues that awareness of this apparent contradiction present in Christianity, between a rational (or, at least, a humane) truth and bad politics, dominates book four, chapter 8
    • Strauss, The City and Man, p. 102. Ronald Beiner argues that awareness of this apparent contradiction present in Christianity, between a rational (or, at least, a humane) truth and bad politics, dominates book four, chapter 8
    • The City and Man , pp. 102
    • Strauss1
  • 58
    • 34248242353 scopus 로고
    • Machiavelli, Hobbes, and Rousseau on Civil Religion
    • Of Rousseau's Social Contract
    • Of Rousseau's Social Contract. "Machiavelli, Hobbes, and Rousseau on Civil Religion," Review of Politics 55, no.4 (1993): 637.
    • (1993) Review of Politics , vol.55 , Issue.4 , pp. 637
  • 59
    • 77954049551 scopus 로고
    • Rational theologians and irrational philosophers
    • See Ernest Fortin, "Rational Theologians and Irrational Philosophers," Interpretation 12, no.2-3 (1984): 351.
    • (1984) Interpretation , vol.12 , Issue.2-3 , pp. 351
    • Fortin, E.1
  • 60
    • 77954082710 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Hebrews 13:14
    • Hebrews 13:14.
  • 61
    • 85021964791 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Restatement on xenophon's hiero
    • Leo Strauss, "Restatement on Xenophon's Hiero," in On Tyranny, p. 210.
    • On Tyranny , pp. 210
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 62
    • 77954050515 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See Glaucon's objection to Socrates' description of the rudimentary city according to the natural or necessary requirements for human beings to enjoy peace and health. Republic 372c-d
    • See Glaucon's objection to Socrates' description of the rudimentary city according to the natural or necessary requirements for human beings to enjoy peace and health. Republic 372c-d.
  • 63
    • 85021964791 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Restatement
    • Harry V. Jaffa testifies to Strauss's antipathy toward any promotion of universal opinions
    • Strauss, "Restatement," in On Tyranny, p. 211. Harry V. Jaffa testifies to Strauss's antipathy toward any promotion of universal opinions.
    • On Tyranny , pp. 211
    • Strauss1
  • 64
    • 77954042899 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Political Philosophy and Honor: The Leo Strauss Dissertation Award
    • See "Political Philosophy and Honor: The Leo Strauss Dissertation Award," Modern Age 21, no.4 (1997): 388.
    • (1997) Modern Age , vol.21 , Issue.4 , pp. 388
  • 66
    • 85021964791 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Restatement
    • Strauss, "Restatement," in On Tyranny, p. 211.
    • On Tyranny , pp. 211
    • Strauss1
  • 68
    • 77954068621 scopus 로고
    • Versus eric voegelin on faith and political philosophy
    • Dante Germino seems in no doubt that Strauss truly entertained the indictment of Christianity here set forth: "For Strauss, the attempted Christian abolition of esotericism meant the attempted abolition of philosophy itself. Medieval Christianity's attempt to subordinate philosophy to revelation was for Strauss but another name for the attempt to destroy philosophy-despite the fact that Aquinas promulgated the principle gratia non tollit naturam sed perficit"
    • Dante Germino seems in no doubt that Strauss truly entertained the indictment of Christianity here set forth: "For Strauss, the attempted Christian abolition of esotericism meant the attempted abolition of philosophy itself. Medieval Christianity's attempt to subordinate philosophy to revelation was for Strauss but another name for the attempt to destroy philosophy-despite the fact that Aquinas promulgated the principle gratia non tollit naturam sed perficit" ("Leo Strauss Versus Eric Voegelin on Faith and Political Philosophy," The Political Science Reviewer 24 [1995]: 264).
    • (1995) The Political Science Reviewer , vol.24 , pp. 264
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 69
    • 77954050044 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Strauss, Persecution and the Art of Writing, p. 21. Platonic political philosophy always takes as its primary reference, not the city, but the life of the individual; not the life of moral and political action, but the life of contemplation. Cf. Laurence Lampert, Leo Strauss and Nietzsche (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), pp. 139-40
    • Strauss, Persecution and the Art of Writing, p. 21. Platonic political philosophy always takes as its primary reference, not the city, but the life of the individual; not the life of moral and political action, but the life of contemplation. Cf. Laurence Lampert, Leo Strauss and Nietzsche (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), pp. 139-40.
  • 70
    • 77954076121 scopus 로고
    • On leo strauss's understanding of the natural law theory of thomas aquinas
    • For an example of the uncontroversial reading of Strauss vis-a-vis Aquinas. Laurence Berns also does not see Strauss as blaming Christianity for the modern break with the classical tradition
    • For an example of the uncontroversial reading of Strauss vis-a-vis Aquinas, see Douglas Kries, "On Leo Strauss's Understanding of the Natural Law Theory of Thomas Aquinas," The Thomist 57, no.2 (1993): 216. Laurence Berns also does not see Strauss as blaming Christianity for the modern break with the classical tradition.
    • (1993) The Thomist , vol.57 , Issue.2 , pp. 216
    • Kries, D.1
  • 71
    • 77954049040 scopus 로고
    • The relation between philosophy and religion: Reflections on leo strauss's suggestion concerning the source and sources of modern philosophy
    • See "The Relation Between Philosophy and Religion: Reflections on Leo Strauss's Suggestion Concerning the Source and Sources of Modern Philosophy," Interpretation 19, no.1 (1991): 52-53. According to Berns, Strauss believed that the motive behind the modern rebellion against medieval philosophy arose from impatience with the "mutual irrefutability of philosophy and revelation" and the moderns' "wish to supersede the tension arising from their mutual irrefutability." Only by making the knowledge of the world that is available to every man "the ultimate source of meaning for humanity's understanding of the world" can man then avoid the tension between the mutually irrefutable claims of philosophy and revelation. According to this view, medieval Christian thought, far from being imprudent, merely adapted the wisdom of ancient political philosophy to the new conditions of revealed religion and continued to maintain the classical tension between the legitimate claims of the city's authoritative opinions and philosophy's call for a life of unrestricted inquiry. But, if I am right, Strauss goes further than this, implying that the modern rebellion was a moral reaction triggered by Christianity's prior attempt to resolve the tension between opinion and philosophy by subordinating philosophy to a peculiarly unpolitical opinion.
    • (1991) Interpretation , vol.19 , Issue.1 , pp. 52-53
  • 72
    • 0003695638 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • What is political philosophy?
    • Strauss argued that "all modern political philosophies belong together because they have a fundamental principle in common. This principle can best be stated negatively: rejection of the classical scheme as unrealistic." Strauss goes on to elucidate why Machiavelli deemed the classical scheme unrealistic: "[TJhere is something fundamentally wrong with an approach to politics which culminates in a utopia, in the description of a best regime whose actualization is highly improbable" Strauss, "What Is Political Philosophy?" in What Is Political Philosophy?, pp. 40-41. Strauss implies, however, that Machiavelli himself was sympathetic to the Averroistic tradition of classical political philosophy which justified the pursuit of the philosophic life in terms of the natural needs of the city. Thus, it appears likely that it was its Christian interpreters who had made classical philosophy appear excessively "unrealistic." James Schall touched on this oblique charge against Christianity: "Strauss implied that the elevation of human expectations due to charity 'caused/ indirectly at least, a sort of fanaticism in modernity... .In this analysis, Strauss seemed to imply a remote Christian, not ideologically anti-Christian, origin for modernity in the worst sense of that term as Strauss used it"
    • What Is Political Philosophy? , pp. 40-41
    • Strauss1
  • 73
    • 84928438221 scopus 로고
    • A latitude for statesmanship? Strauss on St. Thomas
    • Schall, "A Latitude for Statesmanship? Strauss on St. Thomas," Review of Politics 53, no. 1 [1991]: 141).
    • (1991) Review of Politics , vol.53 , Issue.1 , pp. 141
    • Schall1
  • 75
    • 0004081003 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Chicago: University of Chicago Press
    • Leo Strauss, Thoughts on Machiavelli (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), pp. 175 and 202.
    • (1984) Thoughts on Machiavelli , pp. 175-202
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 76
    • 77954078463 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Paul Rahe disputes this interpretation of Machiavelli, arguing that "there is ample indication within his books that-at the deepest level-the enemy is not Christianity but the classical philosophy embedded within it" (Republics Ancient and Modern, Vol. 2: New Modes & Orders in Early Modern Political Thought [Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1994], 328n7 and 343n67). Rahe does not explain whether it seems likely Machiavelli would have launched his radical critique of the ancients had he not seen ancient philosophy as the intellectual core of an ecclesiastical and theological order which, for the benefit of humanity, he felt compelled to overthrow and replace with a new order
    • Paul Rahe disputes this interpretation of Machiavelli, arguing that "there is ample indication within his books that-at the deepest level-the enemy is not Christianity but the classical philosophy embedded within it" (Republics Ancient and Modern, Vol. 2: New Modes & Orders in Early Modern Political Thought [Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1994], 328n7 and 343n67). Rahe does not explain whether it seems likely Machiavelli would have launched his radical critique of the ancients had he not seen ancient philosophy as the intellectual core of an ecclesiastical and theological order which, for the benefit of humanity, he felt compelled to overthrow and replace with a new order.
  • 77
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    • Restatement of xenophon's hiero
    • One of Strauss's extremely rare direct references to Jesus occurs in his description of Machiavelli's design to destroy Christianity not by armed might, the way of Moses, but by propaganda, the way of Jesus himself
    • See Strauss, "Restatement of Xenophon's Hiero," in On Tyranny, p. 183. One of Strauss's extremely rare direct references to Jesus occurs in his description of Machiavelli's design to destroy Christianity not by armed might, the way of Moses, but by propaganda, the way of Jesus himself.
    • On Tyranny , pp. 183
    • Strauss1
  • 78
    • 0003695638 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • What is political philosophy?
    • We should also make a distinction between classical philosophy's use of rhetoric in its relation to the city and modern philosophy's use of propaganda in its relation to the city. Propaganda, as used by both the Christian church and the modern philosophers, is intended to change the world, to make a new and better world. Rhetoric, in the classical sense, aims no higher than a modicum of justice, simply giving each his due. The medieval philosophical tradition (as opposed to the theologizing tradition) maintained the subtle art of rhetoric
    • See also Strauss, "What Is Political Philosophy? in What Is Political Philosophy?, p. 45. We should also make a distinction between classical philosophy's use of rhetoric in its relation to the city and modern philosophy's use of propaganda in its relation to the city. Propaganda, as used by both the Christian church and the modern philosophers, is intended to change the world, to make a new and better world. Rhetoric, in the classical sense, aims no higher than a modicum of justice, simply giving each his due. The medieval philosophical tradition (as opposed to the theologizing tradition) maintained the subtle art of rhetoric.
    • What Is Political Philosophy? , pp. 45
    • Strauss1
  • 82
    • 0004250546 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Regarding the charge made against the classical philosophers for a lack of sufficient realism, chapter 15; 88 Rene Descartes, Discourse on Method, Part I; Thomas Hobbes, De Cive, letter of dedication; Francis Bacon, The Great Instauration, Preface, and The Advancement of Learning, Book 2; 88 Benedict Spinoza, Political Treatise, chapter 1, Introduction
    • Regarding the charge made against the classical philosophers for a lack of sufficient realism, see Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince, chapter 15; 88 Rene Descartes, Discourse on Method, Part I; Thomas Hobbes, De Cive, letter of dedication; Francis Bacon, The Great Instauration, Preface, and The Advancement of Learning, Book 2; 88 Benedict Spinoza, Political Treatise, chapter 1, Introduction.
    • The Prince
    • MacHiavelli, N.1
  • 84
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    • Note
    • And "Marsilius of Padua," in Liberalism Ancient and Modern, p. 201. Cf. Michael Platt, "Leo Strauss: Three Quarrels, Three Questions, One Life," in The Crisis of Liberal Democracy: A Straussian Perspective, ed. Kenneth L. Deutsch and Walter Soffer (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1987), p. 20. "Is not Machiavelli's animus against ancient ideal republics really an animus against an excessive and unpolitical understanding of virtue, which flows from Christian teaching? Machiavelli allows anger at God to become anger at the good. In this want of discrimination Strauss saw a failure of philosophy to be philosophic." Classical virtue had remained moderate and realistically political in that it had never denied the necessity to cultivate the virtues required for war. Even the philosophers, despite their transpolitical aspirations, acknowledged the binding authority of the law, whose end was the unity and preservation of the particular, earthly city. Christianity openly taught a doctrine that diminished men's respect and awe of the particular law of their earthly city; it exposed to the multitude the merely provisional character of human law and thereby sowed the seeds of public contumacy. Between the religious fear of those who believe they know the ways of God and the scientific pride of those who claim to know and control the ways of nature (and who, therefore, claim to be able to make or re-make nature, including human nature), lies the modest wonder of the Platonic philosopher.
  • 86
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    • On the distinction between the Latin Averroist and Machiavellian critiques of religion,18, and 334-35n58
    • On the distinction between the Latin Averroist and Machiavellian critiques of religion, see Paul Rahe, Republics Ancient and Modern, 2: 7,18, and 334-35n58.
    • Republics Ancient and Modern , vol.2 , pp. 7
    • Rahe, P.1
  • 89
  • 91
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    • Note
    • Laurence Lampert paints a forceful picture of the antitheological motive at work in Bacon's rejection of classical philosophy. "Bacon's characteristic opposition to Plato is required by the times: Plato most effectively brought together what Bacon was forced to separate, philosophy and theology. Bacon forbids natural theology, one of the principle parts of Platonism for the people, because it no longer serves philosophy's purpose to allege that it has access to the gods, that it can serve the city by restoring the power of gods gone dead. Bacon's times are not marked by a death of the gods but by a God grown all-powerful, dominating even philosophy, a God whose religion is now rent by discords that threaten European civilization" (Laurence Lampert, Nietzsche and Modern Times: A Study of Bacon, Descartes, and Nietzsche [New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1993], 124). We may question, in passing, whether Strauss actually reads the history of philosophy in quite the same way as Lampert. If he did, then we might suppose that Strauss chose to defend religion in the mid-twentieth century, albeit in his typically paradoxical manner, because he saw that we are once more confronted, like Socrates, with the death of the gods, and because he lacked confidence in Nietzsche's joyous science-the embracing of immanent and eternally recurring nature-as a popular alternative to religion as a foundation for political order. In sense, Strauss's attitude would be that which Gibbon attributed to the magistrates of ancient Rome: "[T]he various modes of worship, which prevailed in the Roman world, were all considered by the people, as equally true; by the philosophers, as equally false; and by the magistrates, as equally useful" (Edward Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, chapter 2).
  • 92
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    • For an example of such a Roman magistrate, see the account of Scipio Africanus in Polybius, The Histories, Book 10, 2
    • For an example of such a Roman magistrate, see the account of Scipio Africanus in Polybius, The Histories, Book 10, 2.
  • 93
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    • Review of leo strauss' die religionskritik spinozas als grundlage seiner bibelwissenschaft
    • See Gerhard Kriiger, "Review of Leo Strauss' Die Religionskritik Spinozas als Grundlage Seiner Bibelwissenschaft," The Independent Journal of Philosophy 5/6 (1979): 174.
    • (1979) The Independent Journal of Philosophy , vol.5-6 , pp. 174
    • Kriiger, G.1
  • 95
  • 97
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    • Philosophy, in the Socratic sense of quest for everlasting truth, tends to be thrown out along with Biblical religion
    • Philosophy, in the Socratic sense of quest for everlasting truth, tends to be thrown out along with Biblical religion.
  • 98
    • 33746045344 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Philosophy as rigorous science and political philosophy
    • Strauss, "Philosophy as Rigorous Science and Political Philosophy," in Studies in Platonic Political Philosophy, p. 36.
    • Studies in Platonic Political Philosophy , pp. 36
    • Strauss1
  • 100
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    • Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, ed. Michael Oakeshott (New York: Collier Books, 1962), I, 6, pp. 53-54
    • Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, ed. Michael Oakeshott (New York: Collier Books, 1962), I, 6, pp. 53-54.
  • 101
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    • Green, Jew and Philosopher: The Return to Maimonides in the Jewish Thought of Leo Strauss (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993), p. 19
    • Green, Jew and Philosopher: The Return to Maimonides in the Jewish Thought of Leo Strauss (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993), p. 19.
  • 102
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    • Green refers to the following passages in works by Strauss: Philosophy and Law, p. 12,15-19
    • Green refers to the following passages in works by Strauss: Philosophy and Law, p. 12,15-19.
  • 103
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    • Natural Right and History, p. 167-70,178nll, 188-89
    • Natural Right and History, p. 167-70,178nll, 188-89.
  • 104
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    • "Preface to Spinoza's Critique ofReligion," p. 29-31
    • "Preface to Spinoza's Critique ofReligion," p. 29-31.
  • 105
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    • Correspondence concerning modernity
    • Strauss goes so far as to condemn the modern political society brought about through technological mastery of nature as unnatural; and its very success has made the return to a more natural political society almost impossible, 15 August. "I know very well that today [the small city state] cannot be restored; but the famous atomic bombs-not to mention at all cities with a million inhabitants, gadgets, funeral homes, 'ideologies'-show that the contemporary solution, that is, the completely modern solution, is contra naturam
    • Strauss goes so far as to condemn the modern political society brought about through technological mastery of nature as unnatural; and its very success has made the return to a more natural political society almost impossible. See letter to Karl Lowith (15 August 1946), in "Correspondence Concerning Modernity," Independent journal of Philosophy, 107-108. "I know very well that today [the small city state] cannot be restored; but the famous atomic bombs-not to mention at all cities with a million inhabitants, gadgets, funeral homes, 'ideologies'-show that the contemporary solution, that is, the completely modern solution, is contra naturam.
    • (1946) Independent Journal of Philosophy , pp. 107-108
    • Lowith, K.1
  • 106
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    • Strauss at least seems to have had considerable respect for the philosophical acuity of Thomas Aquinas. One thinks of Strauss's numerous citations of Aquinas's works in Natural Right and History, especially in chapter 4. Strauss accuses contemporary writers who attempt to interpret and make use of Aquinas's doctrines of having been misled by modern assumptions
    • Strauss at least seems to have had considerable respect for the philosophical acuity of Thomas Aquinas. One thinks of Strauss's numerous citations of Aquinas's works in Natural Right and History, especially in chapter 4. Strauss accuses contemporary writers who attempt to interpret and make use of Aquinas's doctrines of having been misled by modern assumptions.
  • 107
    • 77954039799 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • On a new interpretation of plato's political philosophy
    • And as for neo-Thomism, Strauss's attitude is clearly dismissive
    • See Leo Strauss, "On a New Interpretation of Plato's Political Philosophy," in Social Research, 347n24. And as for neo-Thomism, Strauss's attitude is clearly dismissive.
    • Social Research , pp. 347-424
    • Strauss, L.1
  • 110
    • 33846176510 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Preface to spinoza's critique of religion
    • See Strauss, "Preface to Spinoza's Critique of Religion," inLiberalism Ancient and Modern, pp. 257.
    • Liberalism Ancient and Modern , pp. 257
    • Strauss1
  • 111
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    • Note
    • "I began therefore to wonder whether the self-destruction of reason was not the inevitable outcome of modern rationalism as distinguished from premodern rationalism, especially Jewish-medieval rationalism and its classical (Aristotelian and Platonic) foundation." Maimonides exercised immense care in veiling the inquiries of speculative reason. He was aware that, in providing the necessary setting for the moral or political life, religion meets philosophy at the level of divine law. But what will happen if religion itself becomes a source of political instability? In that case, religion will no longer serve the best interests of either the political or the philosophical life. May we not suppose that, as with Maimonides' Guide of the Perplexed, potential philosophers also constituted Spinoza's primary intended audience? But Spinoza's circumstances had changed; he could no longer employ a respectful rhetoric concerning the ruling opinions of his day. Those ruling opinions had become a source of disorder rather than order. Spinoza did not so much declare a revolution as decamp from a city already in the grip of sectarian strife. Can we even perhaps say that Spinoza attempted to rescue a rationalism that was one of the highest fruits of Judaism from the self-destruction of the city of faith? Surely, any speculation on Spinoza's actual judgment of the relative merit of the two testaments must take into account his condemnation of the "dualism of spiritual and temporal power, and therewith for perpetual civil discord"-a dualism that is far more apparent in the New Testament than in the Old.


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