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Captives of Sovereignty

Captives of Sovereignty

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Jonathan Havercroft
Cambridge University Press, 9/30/2011
EAN 9781107012875, ISBN10: 1107012872

Hardcover, 280 pages, 23.4 x 15.9 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

A picture of sovereignty holds the study of politics captive. Captives of Sovereignty looks at the historical origins of this picture of politics, critiques its philosophical assumptions and offers a way to move contemporary critiques of sovereignty beyond their current impasse. The first part of the book is diagnostic. Why, despite their best efforts to critique sovereignty, do political scientists who are dissatisfied with the concept continue to reproduce the logic of sovereignty in their thinking? Havercroft draws on the writings of Hobbes and Spinoza to argue that theories of sovereignty are produced and reproduced in response to skepticism. The second part of the book draws on contemporary critiques of skeptical arguments by Wittgenstein and Cavell to argue that their alternative way of responding to skepticism avoids the need to invoke a sovereign as the final arbiter of all political disputes.

Introduction
Part I
1. A picture holds us captive
2. Sovereignty, judgment, and epistemic skepticism
3. Sovereignty, language, and ethical skepticism
4. Sovereignty, religious skepticism, and the theological-political problem
Part II
5. Political authority and skepticism
6. Authority, criteria, and the new social contract
7. The claim of global community
Conclusion
authority without supremacy, community with contestation.