偶然性的必要性

Umut Özsu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在对马克思主义的所有标准批评中,认为马克思主义与机械的、决定论的历史描述相结合的说法是最普遍的。它也是最难以辩护的。本章认为,马克思主义为解释国际法的偶然性提供了一套特别有力的分析工具。将偶然性的概念浪漫化,将其描述为一种幻灭或破裂——极端不确定的时刻与它们所处的更广泛的社会背景完全不一致——有可能将受到审查的事件降级为相互不相关的事故,在孤立或松散的联系中受到赞扬或谴责。相比之下,马克思主义对国际法的分析,对阶级权力和司法权威之间的共同构成关系充满活力,提供了一个解释框架,在这个框架内可以理解偶然事件。我的论点分两个阶段进行。我首先回顾马克思直接涉及法律和权利问题的一些方式。然后,我借鉴了尼古拉斯·普兰查斯的国家理论,提出了一种新的马克思主义的国际法方法。我的论点是,资本主义制度下的法律问题与资本主义制度下的偶然性问题密切相关,马克思主义传统对这两个问题的回答比它们通常被认为的要微妙得多,而且作为一个“马克思主义者”,不需要承诺所有偶然性都是虚幻的观点,而只是承诺偶然性(如代理)是社会条件的观点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Necessity of Contingency
Of all the standard criticisms of Marxism, the claim that it is wedded to a mechanical and deterministic account of history is among the most pervasive. It is also among the least defensible. This chapter argues that Marxism affords an especially strong set of analytical tools for explaining the contingencies of international law. Romanticising the concept of contingency as illuminative of aporia or ruptures—moments of radical uncertainty utterly at odds with the broader social contexts in which they register—risks relegating the events under scrutiny to the status of mutually unrelated accidents, to be lauded or lambasted in isolation or loose association. By contrast, a Marxist analysis of international law, one that is alive to the co-constitutive relations between class power and juridical authority, provides an explanatory framework within which contingencies may be comprehended. My argument proceeds in two stages. I first revisit some of the ways in which Marx engaged directly with questions of law and rights. I then draw upon Nicos Poulantzas’ theory of the state to propose a new Marxist approach to international law. My contention is that the question of law under capitalism is closely related to the question of contingency under capitalism, that the Marxist tradition’s responses to both questions are considerably more nuanced than they have generally been made out to be, and that being a ‘Marxist’ requires commitment not to the view that all contingency is illusory but simply to the view that contingency (like agency) is socially conditioned.
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