The good state, from a cosmic point of view
In: International politics: a journal of transnational issues and global problems, Volume 50, Issue 1, p. 57-76
Abstract
This article considers the question of the good state -- and its normative model of foreign policy, internationalism -- from a cosmopolitan perspective. This cosmopolitan worldview pushes beyond anthropocentrism to anchor its account in the vulnerability of humanity both to the political dangers it poses to itself and to the cosmic arrangement of chance that enables complex life on earth. The essay first critiques both academic and policy defences of internationalism as a 'middle-ground' between realism and cosmopolitanism by putting its statist ontology into question -- that is, its fundamental account of human existence as bounded and determined by the nation-state. The perseverance of this underlying statist ontology creates tensions within academic defences of good international citizenship, which profess strongly cosmopolitan norms but whose moral philosophy, in accepting some practices of Realpolitik, is ethically insufficient. It then asserts an alternative ontology of (interdependent) human existence across borders and ecosystems, one that incorporates an ethically transformed state as a legal principle and an important means of cosmopolitan world order. Adapted from the source document.
Subjects
Languages
English
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke UK
ISSN: 1740-3898
DOI
Report Issue