Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary of Russian Concepts
- Timeline
- 1 The Origins of Political Philosophy in Russia
- 2 First Debates in Russian Political Philosophy – ‘What Is to be Done?’
- 3 Socialism and Marxism in Russia: The Peasant Commune is Dead – Long Live the Peasant Commune!
- 4 Christian Political Philosophy in a Modernising World – Preparing for God’s Kingdom
- 5 Russian Liberalism Revisited – Between a Rock and a Hard Place
- 6 The Long Russian Revolution – Signposts for a Roller Coaster
- 7 Soviet Marxism–Leninism and Political Philosophy – Never Mind the Gaps!
- 8 Christian Political Philosophy in Exile – Between Sobornost’ and Theocracy
- 9 Counter-Soviet Political Philosophy in Emigration – Beyond the Pale
- 10 Late Soviet and Early Post Soviet Political Philosophy – Licking the Wounds
- 11 Political Philosophy for a New Russia – New Wine in Old Bottles?
- Conclusion – Mediation Beyond Duality and Immediacy
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Russian Liberalism Revisited – Between a Rock and a Hard Place
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 November 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary of Russian Concepts
- Timeline
- 1 The Origins of Political Philosophy in Russia
- 2 First Debates in Russian Political Philosophy – ‘What Is to be Done?’
- 3 Socialism and Marxism in Russia: The Peasant Commune is Dead – Long Live the Peasant Commune!
- 4 Christian Political Philosophy in a Modernising World – Preparing for God’s Kingdom
- 5 Russian Liberalism Revisited – Between a Rock and a Hard Place
- 6 The Long Russian Revolution – Signposts for a Roller Coaster
- 7 Soviet Marxism–Leninism and Political Philosophy – Never Mind the Gaps!
- 8 Christian Political Philosophy in Exile – Between Sobornost’ and Theocracy
- 9 Counter-Soviet Political Philosophy in Emigration – Beyond the Pale
- 10 Late Soviet and Early Post Soviet Political Philosophy – Licking the Wounds
- 11 Political Philosophy for a New Russia – New Wine in Old Bottles?
- Conclusion – Mediation Beyond Duality and Immediacy
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
[L]iberalism in all its aspects developed in opposition to state power.
Michael Mandelbaum, The Ideas that Conquered the World (Mandelbaum 2002: 74)But regardless of the sphere in which we may move or the kind of law to which we may be subordinate, everywhere we are free beings, for liberty constitutes an inalienable characteristic of our spiritual nature.
Boris Chicherin, ‘Property and State’, in Liberty, Equality, and the Market (Chicherin 1998b: 366)Liberalism has been the most consistently oppositional political philosophy throughout Russian history. This probably also explains why it has received so much attention from Western scholars, often not without a whiff of wishfulness. The common denominator of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century liberalism in Russia is a negative one: rejection of arbitrary autocratic rule and struggle against the widespread ‘legal nihilism’ that includes the radicals and terrorists, the socialists and Marxists, and the Christian thinkers with the exception of Solov’ev (Walicki 1992: 9–104). Russian political philosophers generally perceived the law as a mere instrument in the hands of state power, prioritised social justice and equality over individual civil and political rights, and rejected formal legality in the name of true, Christian morality. This contrasts with the undeniable progress of legal culture and penal law since the 1864 reforms, the development of the zemstvo practices of limited local self-government, reluctant moves towards popular representation and constitutionalism, and the increasing academic freedom that yielded ‘legal narodniki’, ‘legal Marxists’ and ‘legal liberals’ (Nethercott 2007; Medushevsky 2006).
There is no generally accepted definition of liberalism. Following Chantal Mouffe, I identify three key principles of the liberal tradition: individual liberty, human rights and rule of law [Rechtsstaat, pravovoe gosudarstvo, gospodstvo zakona] (Mouffe 2000: 2). The distinctive feature of liberalism is not simply the understanding, however crucial, of the human being as inherently free (Kara- Murza and Zhukova 2019: 13), but the idea that this inherent freedom should be the main organising principle of socio-economic and political order. If one links those two orders, the economic and the political, the result is the classical liberalism of John Locke and Isaiah Berlin.
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- Russian Political PhilosophyAnarchy, Authority, Autocracy, pp. 75 - 91Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2022