Automatic Leviathan: Cybernetics and politics in Carl Schmitt’s postwar writings - Nicolas Guilhot
Location:
Virtual Event - Zoom
Details to be sent to those who register
Date/time
Tue 10 November 2020
14:00-15:00
The Edinburgh Centre for International and Global Law and the Centre for Ethics and Critical Thought present
Automatic Leviathan: Cybernetics and politics in Carl Schmitt’s postwar writings
Professor Nicolas Guilhot, Chair of Intellectual History, EUI
https://www.eui.eu/DepartmentsAndCentres/HistoryAndCivilization/People/Professors/Guilhot
This article questions the current vogue of Carl Schmitt among political theorists who read him as an antidote to the depoliticizing force of economics and technology in the age of neoliberalism and its algorithmic rationalities. It takes Schmitt’s sparse reflections about cybernetics and game theory as paradigmatic of the theoretical and political problems raised by any theory positing the autonomy of the political. It suggests that this ultimately misunderstands the role of cybernetic representations of political decision-making in shoring up in the 1960s and 1970s the autonomy of the political that Schmitt so vehemently defended.
Article is available on Sage Journals and should be pre-read.
This event is free and open to all but registration is required.
Image credit: Photo by Johannes Groll on Unsplash