A POLITICS WITHOUT COMPROMISE: THE YOUNG HEGELIANS AND POLITICS
Author(s) -
Vivien García
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ethics politics and society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2184-2582
DOI - 10.21814/eps.2.1.95
Subject(s) - compromise , politics , mediation , process (computing) , political science , law , computer science , operating system
This article aims at exploring how most of the Young Hegelians came toreject all forms of compromise. It will first show how Young Hegelianism itself wasborn from a process of radicalisation. Then, it will expound some of the theoreticaldevelopments that this process produced and explain why and how all forms ofcompromise came to be rejected. For Young Hegelians, a compromise is an antidialecticalposition. It consists in the adoption of a median posture, which does notcorrespond with a real mediation. It is a way of deflating conflicts and, moreprecisely, to avoid the oppositions at work in history being unveiled in their purity.
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