The Appearance of an Interminable Natural History and its Ends Foucault’s Lectures on The Birth of Biopolitics at the Collège de France 1979

Sverre Raffnsøe, Knut Ove Eliassen
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Abstract

While the analysis of liberalism fills much of The Birth of Biopolitics, the focus of Foucault’s discussion is on the dynamic, equivocal and enigmatic contemporary condition at the intersection of welfare governance, biopolitics and neo-liberalism of the late seventies. This article examines The Birth of Biopolitics as a prolongation of Security, Territoriality and Population by analyzing how Foucault frames liberalism in the wider historical context of governmentality. In Foucault’s view, governmentality should be understood as a secular rationalization of the art of government. While the pastoral power of the Catholic Church was wielded against the backdrop of eschatology and the imminence of the end of worldly power, the early modern concept of reason of state brought with it the idea of an interminable history. Governmentality and reason of state spring from an undecided and precarious European balance of power between competing states. In order to measure up to external competition, individual states are required to develop a system of policing that collects detailed knowledge of the body politic. Insofar as the logic of the population as a collection of living beings comes to the fore as a primary target of government intervention, the imperatives of biopolitics and the politics of health arise. Liberalism forms an important modification of the double heritage of reason of state and biopolitics. This is a rationalization of government that, rather than breaking with the fundamental assumptions of governmentality, critically addresses the basic criteria for good government. Stressing the necessity for good government to acknowledge and incorporate the self-regulation of the population it governs, liberalism thus articulates a new kind of naturalness intrinsic to the population springing from the interaction between individuals motivated by self-interest. As a basic principle for its understanding of governing, liberalism embraces a natural history without any transcendental horizons, a secular and tragic natural history in which freedom can never be taken for granted insofar as its participants constantly constitute a danger for one another. It is also a mode of history in which the art of government is constantly called upon and forced to organize and secure the conditions for the exercise and development of freedom. For Foucault, thus, the liberal art of government is not a position to be affirmed or denied. Rather, the liberal art of government draws the outline of an experience of historicity that is an experience of an ongoing and unsettling, but also unending, crisis.
冗长的自然史的出现及其终结——福柯1979年在法兰西学院关于生命政治学诞生的讲座
虽然对自由主义的分析占据了《生命政治的诞生》的大部分内容,但福柯讨论的重点是在70年代末福利治理、生命政治和新自由主义交叉的动态、模棱两可和神秘的当代状况。本文通过分析福柯如何在更广泛的治理历史背景下构建自由主义,将《生命政治的诞生》视为安全、领土和人口的延伸。在福柯看来,治理应该被理解为对治理艺术的世俗合理化。虽然天主教会的牧灵权力是在末世论和世俗权力即将终结的背景下行使的,但早期现代的国家理性概念带来了一种无休止的历史观念。治理和国家理性源于欧洲竞争国家之间尚未确定和不稳定的权力平衡。为了达到外部竞争的标准,各个州都需要发展一套收集国家详细信息的警务系统。只要人口作为生物集合的逻辑成为政府干预的主要目标,生物政治和健康政治的必要性就会出现。自由主义是对国家理性和生命政治双重遗产的重要修正。这是一种政府的合理化,而不是打破治理的基本假设,批判性地解决了良好政府的基本标准。自由主义强调良好的政府必须承认并纳入其所治理的人口的自我调节,从而阐明了一种新的自然性,这种自然性是由受自身利益驱动的个人之间的相互作用产生的。作为其对治理的理解的基本原则,自由主义包含了一种没有任何先验视野的自然史,一种世俗的、悲剧性的自然史,在这种自然史中,自由永远不会被视为理所当然,因为它的参与者不断地对彼此构成危险。它也是一种历史模式,在这种模式中,政府的艺术不断被要求并被迫组织和确保自由的行使和发展的条件。因此,对福柯来说,政府的自由艺术不是一种可以肯定或否定的立场。相反,政府的自由艺术描绘了一种历史性经验的轮廓,这种经验是一种持续的、令人不安的,但也是无休止的危机。
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