Strauss reaffirms the importance of classical political theory to remedy the crisis of modern times. He does not agree with the proposition that all political theory is ideological in nature mirroring a given socio-economic interest, for most political thinkers are motivated by the possibility of discerning the principles of the right order in social existence. A political philosopher has to be primarily interested in truth. Past philosophies are studied with an eye on coherence and consistency. The authors of the classics in political theory are superior because they were geniuses and measured in their writings. Strauss scrutinises the methods and purposes of the ‘new’ political science and concludes that it was defective when compared with classical political theory, particularly that of Aristotle. For Aristotle, a political philosopher or a political scientist has to be impartial, for he possesses a more comprehensive and clearer understanding of human ends.
Political science and political philosophy are identical, because
science consisting of theoretical and practical aspects is identical with
philosophy. Aristotle’s political science also evaluates political things,
defends autonomy of prudence in practical matters and views political action as
essentially ethical. These premises Behaviouralism denies, for it separates
political philosophy from political science and substitutes the distinction
between theoretical and practical sciences. It perceives applied sciences to be
derived from theoretical sciences, but not in the same manner as the classical
tradition visualises. Behaviouralism like positivism is disastrous, for it
denies knowledge regarding ultimate principles. Their bankruptcy is evident,
for they seem helpless, unable to distinguish the right from the wrong, the
just from the unjust in view of the rise of totalitarianism. Strauss counters
Easton’s charge of historicism by alleging that the new science is responsible
for the decline in political theory, for it pointed to and abetted the general
political crisis of the West because of its overall neglect of normative
issues. Vogelin regards political science and political theory as inseparable
and that one is not possible without the other. Political theory is not
ideology, utopia or scientific methodology, but an experiential science of the
right order at both the level of the individual and society. It has to dissect
critically and empirically the problem of order. Theory is not just any opining
about human existence in society, it rather is an attempt at formulating the
meaning of existence by explicating the content of a definitive class of
experiences. Its argument is not arbitrary, but derives its validity from the
aggregate of experiences to which it must permanently refer for empirical
control.
Subcribe on Youtube - IGNOU SERVICE
For PDF copy of Solved Assignment
WhatsApp Us - 9113311883(Paid)
0 Comments
Please do not enter any Spam link in the comment box