Toward Perpetual War? The Stakes and Limits of Schmitt's Critique of Kant's Cosmopolitanism Available to Purchase
JEAN-CLAUDE MONOD is a research fellow at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (UMR 8547, Archives Husserl) and teaches at the École Normale Supérieure (Paris). He specializes in post-Hegelian German philosophy and political philosophy, looking in particular at the intersection of politics, religion, and modernity. He has published La Querelle de la sécularisation, de Hegel à Blumenberg (Vrin, 2002), Penser l'ennemi, affronter l'exception. Réflexions critiques sur l'actualité de Carl Schmitt (La Découverte, 2007), Hans Blumenberg (Belin, « Voix allemandes », 2007), Sécularisation et laïcité (PUF, 2007).
RON ESTES is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Comparative Literature at the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he is finishing a dissertation on Nostalgia and the Uncanny in the Nineteenth-Century British and American Gothic Novel. He has translated essays by Jean-Luc Nancy, Eva Geulen, Gerard Wajcman and Willy Apollon. He currently resides in Seville, Spain.
Jean-Claude Monod, Ron Estes; Toward Perpetual War? The Stakes and Limits of Schmitt's Critique of Kant's Cosmopolitanism. CR: The New Centennial Review 1 March 2013; 13 (1): 137–160. doi: https://doi.org/10.14321/crnewcentrevi.13.1.0137
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