Die Moral der Exekutive. Das Charisma der guten Politik und eine ‚Fichteanische‘ Gefährdung im modernen Institutionenstaat
Abstract
As a structural problem of the normative dimension of contemporary societies, the
article shows that increasing real justice deficits go hand in hand with high political
expectations
of ‘justice’, while on the other hand the achievements of the law are often
no longer sufficiently valued. This has a background in a certain way in which modern
moral and political spheres have diverged, for which the theoretical significance can be
illustrated with Johann G. Fichte. Fichte had tried to renew once again the Western cultural
idea of the political with maximum moralization – and for this very reason ended
up having massive gaps in relation to concrete questions of justice. Today’s mental constellation
can be described as ‘inverse Fichteanism’. There is a threat of – especially in
the institutional state – a general moralization of all correlations, and above all a (moral)
general empowerment
of politics (absolutizing the executive). This development stands
at the end of an erosion that took place during the 20th century, and which was reflected
in the great theoretical positions of decisionism and, on the other hand, of legal positivism.
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