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Eric Voegelin Society Meeting 2009
"Eric
Voegelin and the
Copyright 2006 William Petropulos
Eric
Voegelin and the
Late
in life Eric Voegelin recorded that his work on Plato was done "in the
spirit" of the Plato scholars of the Stefan George circle.
[2]
Today,
in the time allotted to me, I want to talk about George's place in the Plato
scholarship of his circle, and therefore his role in Voegelin's
understanding of Plato. The high point of George's influence on Voegelin was
in the early 1930's, and I will confine my remarks to Voegelin's works of
that time.
I
In
a 1930 lecture on Max Weber
[3]
Voegelin pointed out that due to
Following
the first mention of Weber by name, and as the individual who bears this
spiritual isolation heroically, but does not rise above it, Voegelin notes: At
the deep point of spiritual decline, "the creator of the new language
arose in the person of Stefan George". A few sentences later, Voegelin
compares Weber and George. The dominance of Weber's intellect paralyzed him
for practical action and he therefore failed to respond to the calling of
charismatic leader, Weber was not open
to the "renewal of Eros out of the spirit of the ancient world", and
Weber rejected the "rebirth of the divine in man" ("Wiedergeburt
des Gttlichen im Menschen"). In these three points George is Weber's
antipode: the poet took very seriously his calling as charismatic leader, he
saw the renewal of Eros out of the spirit of the ancient world as the
necessary step toward the renewal of Occidental culture, and, against Weber's
notion of the "disenchanted world", George proclaimed the divine
presence.
What
is the meaning of these three points? They refer to the basic issues of
political community that Aristotle discussed under the term of "political
friendship".
[4]
The common participation in the ground of being creates the
harmony of mind that enables individuals to form community. Applied to the
comparison between Weber and George: by virtue of Eros the charismatic
individual inspires his companions to undertake the ascent to the idea of the
good. Through joint participation in the spiritual center the correct
super-ordination and subordination of the powers of the soul takes place that
makes rational political action possible.
Max
Weber's science does not reach this level of reflection, and therefore does
not discuss the common faith out of which coordinated political action can
flow. Voegelin speaks of Max Weber's own faith as a private one that could
"not be communicated".
[5]
The
roots of public life in "political friendship" ("philia politike") is
the subject of Voegelin's concluding remarks on George. Voegelin repeats what
he said at the beginning of the lecture. The nationwide public forms that were
achieved in the West are missing in
In
1930 the comparison between Weber and George is clear: on the one hand, the
isolated individual living in a private faith--that is the spiritual crisis;
on the other hand, community constituted through participation in a common
spiritual ground.
II
In
Voegelin's Theory of Governance
[6]
, written between 1930 and 1931, Wolters' Herrschaft
und Dienst, and thus Stefan George, become the focus of Voegelin's
study:
"The
theory developed by Wolters, based on the person of [Stefan] George and his
circle, with George's works and ideas serving as his model, is the most
comprehensive of those we have examined: It offers an inventory of core
problems that require little more than minor additions" (340).
The
core issues that Voegelin refers to are those we encountered in the Weber
lecture: The human being's openness to divinity which makes possible the
moment of communion, and therefore communication, that is the foundation of
political order. Adopting the term of the George circle, Voegelin speaks of
"the spiritual deed" and "the divinely inspired life of the ruler"
(340) whose Eros awakens his companions to undertake the ascent to the idea of
the good.
The
only work that Voegelin judges equal to Wolters' is The
Boke of the Governor by the 16th century Platonist Sir Thomas
Elyot.
What
is the connection between Plato and Herrschaft
und Dienst, "based on the person of [Stefan] George", in which Plato
is mentioned only once in passing?
In
1930 Kurt Hildebrandt, Plato scholar and member of the George circle, answered
this question:
Wolter's
Herrschaft und Dienst "brought
to light the forgotten truth that it is the vocation of the poet to revivify a
dead world and to found a new 'spiritual empire'". Once this level of
understanding was reached, it became possible to produce a series of works on
Plato born of the new ethos".
[7]
To
sum up George's influence on Plato studies: He overcame the 19th
century view that limited Plato to being the founder of modern science, and
focused on Eros, the ascent to the divine ground, and the role of a small
group in the attempt to spiritually renew society.
In
a discussion of Kurt Hildebrandt's 1932 book on Plato Hans
Georg Gadamer commented on the importance of George's
pedagogical Eros:
"[Kurt]
Hildebrandt's own experience of the relationship of master to disciple and
his participation in the educational influence of the poet on his younger
friends, made it possible for him to rediscover much that is of central
importance in the dialogs of Plato.
[8]
In
1951 Leo Strauss underlined George's importance in the new interpretation of
Plato. In a letter to Voegelin, obviously echoing a judgment that Voegelin had
already uttered, he wrote: "You are entirely right: George understood more
of Plato than Wilamowitz, Jaeger, and the entire guild".
[9]
III
Having
established the decisive role of Stefan George in his circle's understanding
of Plato, I will conclude with a look at Voegelin's two books on race
[10]
published in 1933, in which the divine ground as the basis of
political community and the role of Eros in the creation of a spiritual elite
become explicit themes.
Voegelin
quotes Othmar Spann: "The spiritual history of archetypal humanity is
primary religious history. It was Schelling who endeavored to explain race
formation from this point of view".
[11]
According
to Schelling a people does not come into being by living together and in
engaging in trade. Prior to this a consciousness of community must exist. The
myth itself constitutes the ground of being that unites individuals into
political community. Voegelin credits Schelling with the insight into the "religious
natureof all community formation", and adds that this methodological
principle is "equally valid for the formation of community today".
[12]
Among Voegelin's contemporaries it was George and his circle who
shared Schelling's insight. Friedrich Gundolf wrote in his book on George:
"One
must first know the god, only then can one know the community and the people.
Nations are created by the gods. From biblical times to Hoelderlin every sage
has known this and therefore, at one and the same time, has called upon both
god and the people"
[13]
.
Voegelin's
participation in the hopes of the George circle that the divine can be
recovered and the human being led to a "true image" of man is found in The History of The Race Idea. He points out that, at present, the
idea of race is in a state of decay because the spiritual manner of seeing
primal images has been lost. In its stead the race idea is approached with
methods borrowed from the natural sciences. These give a truncated view of the
human being. On the other hand the spiritual idea of race, represented by the
George circle, works with the primal image of the entire human being. Voegelin
writes:
"That
the community of noble blood finds itself through the relationship of noble
spirits, that the community is governed by its own laws through which the
members find and recognize one another; to know this, and much more,
requires a primal way of seeing in which the full image of the human being is
revealed"
[14]
.
Voegelin
finds the principle by which the "full image of the human being is revealed"
in Plato:
"Only
where a spiritual norm gives order to human beings ("in Zucht haelt") and
brings them together in harmony, can great history take place: for all time
Plato has established the law of the reciprocal and mutually supporting claims
of the noble body and the noble spirit"
[15]
.
What
Voegelin describes is the view of the George circle, again as expressed by
Friedrich Gundolf in his book on George:
"Where
a primordial, god seeking, human being embodies a vision of the divine and an
image of the world, the Platonic circle is repeated, from faith that is by
virtue of the blood, by virtue of the beautiful life
[16]
--to love, from love to vision, and from vision to will, which
only awakens a response in contemporary and future human beings who also
embody the same virtue of blood' ".
[17]
In
view of Voegelin's reference to Plato, adoption of the George circle's
concept of "noble blood", and affirmation of the hierarchy of human types,
it is clear that Voegelin sets his hopes for overcoming the
biological-materialistic notion of the human being in the notion of a
spiritual elite. But Voegelin laments that conditions are not yet ripe for the
recognition of such an elite. Nothing remains of Schiller's and Goethe's
idea of the "select circle", and "George's doctrine of the spiritual
empire has not been understood". Instead, from the dominance of natural
science superstitions the dangerous notion has arisen that a race can be bred
like animals.
"It
is a nightmare to think that we should not recognize the people who we follow
and who we let get close to us by their glance, their speech, and their
comeliness ("am Blick, am Wort und an der Gebaerde"), but by their cranial
index"
[18]
The
task of awakening this primal way of seeing that will help his contemporaries
see the primal image of "noble blood", the basis of the "noble community"
that is constituted in the "relationship of noble spirits", will not be
easy. But, so Voegelin, he, "who in matters of the spirit, makes it easy for
himself, has no right to be heard"
[19]
. This sentence ends Voegelin's Introduction to The History of the Race Idea. It is a quote from Friedrich Gundolf,
but Voegelin does not put it in quotation marks, presumably because those who
he wishes to address recognize one another "by their glance, their speech,
and their comeliness" ("am Blick, am Wort und an der Gebaerde"), or, as
George expressed the same thought:
"You
will know who is genuine by his face and stature" ("Antliz und wuchs weist
euch den Echten aus") and "The rank of each individual is revealed in his
glance" ("Aus jedes aug erriet sich hier sein grad")
[20]
Neuen
Adel den ihr suchet
Fuehrt
nicht her von schild und krone!
[...]
Stammlos
wachsen im gewuehle
Seltene
sprossen eigenen ranges
Und
ihr kennt die mitgeburten
An
der augen wahrer glut." Ibid., 85.
The
new nobility you seek/ Is not found in crown or coat of arms/ [...]Nameless,
and out of the mass, grow/ Rare sons of equal rank/ And you recognize your
brothers/ In the honest fervor of their eyes."
