Nietzsche on Conflict and Pluralism of Legal Orders
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24310/EstudiosNIETen.vi15.10795Keywords:
conflict, agon, substance ontology, equilibrium, lawAbstract
This paper examines Nietzsche’s philosophy of life against the background claim that conflict and struggle constitute an irreducible dimension of human existence at all levels and the attempt on the part of «agonistic theorists» to incorporate this claim into democratic theory. To begin with, Nietzsche’s philosophy of life is set out against traditional metaphysics (substance ontology) as a dynamic, relational ontology of conflict among powers without substance. Given this concept of life, what, then, are the political implications of Nietzsche commitment to life-affirmation and life-enhancement? Against the standard view that Nietzsche advocates domination and violence, it is argued that life is maximally enhanced when struggle (or tension) and plurality are maximised, and that struggle and plurality are maximised under conditions of an approximate equilibrium among more or less equal forces, and not under conditions of domination. This line of thought is applied to the question of the nature and status of law with the result that Nietzsche’s philosophy of life issues in an affirmation of a plurality of legal orders in constructive tension with one another, raising the question of the institutional conditions that would make this possible
Downloads
References
Busch, Th., Die Affirmation des Chaos. St. Ottilien: EOS Verlag 1989.
Ciano, A., Zijn en Worden. Nietzsches omduiding van het substantiebegrip, Maastricht: Shaker, 2003.
Nietzsche, F., Obras Completas, I-IV (OC ). Director ed. Diego Sánchez Meca. Madrid: Tecnos, 2011-2016.
Nietzsche, F., Correspondencia I-VI. (CO). Director ed. Luis E. de Santiago Guervós. Madrid : Trotta, 2005- 2012.
Nietzsche, F., Fragmentos Póstumos I-IV (FP). Director ed. Diego Sánchez Meca. Madrid: Tecnos, 2006-2010.
Siemens, H.W., «Reassessing Radical Democratic Theory in the light of Nietzsche’s Ontology of Conflict», en Nietzsche and Political Thought, K. Ansell-Pearson (ed. ), London: Bloomsbury, 2013, pp. 83-106.
Siemens, H.W., «Nietzsche’s Political Philosophy. A Review of Recent Literature», en Nietzsche-Studien 30, (2001). 509-52.
Siemens, H.W., «The Rise of Political Agonism and its Relation to Deconstruction», en Beyond Deconstruction: Rethinking Myth, Reconstructing Reason, A. Martinengo (ed.), Berlin: De Gruyter, 2012, pp. 213-223.
Volker, G., «Das "Prinzip des Gleichgewichts"», en Nietzsche-Studien 12 (1983) 111 – 133.
Downloads
Dimensions
Issue
Section
License
As of issue 21 (2021) this journal is published only in open access (diamond route).
From that number 21, like the previous numbers published in NIETZSCHE STUDIES, they are subject to the Creative Commons Acknowledgment-NoComercia-ShareIgual 4.0 license, the full text of which can be consulted at <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 >
It is the responsibility of the authors to obtain the necessary permissions of the images that are subject to copyright.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Copyright generates two different rights: moral rights and patrimonial rights that EJFB recognizes and respects. Moral rights are those relating to the recognition of the authorship. They are rights of a personal nature that are perpetual, inalienable, unseizable and imprescriptible as consequence of the indivisible union of the author and his/her work.
Patrimonial rights are those that can be derived from the reproduction, distribution, adaptation or communication of the work, among others.

11.png)