The Role of Metaxy in the Political Philosophy of Eric Voegelin

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Role of Metaxy in the Political Philosophy of Eric Voegelin
Abstract
This book is a study of Eric Voegelin (1901-1985) and of the role played by metaxy in his vision of political philosophy. Metaxy, already defined by Plato as the "in-between" matrix of the human condition, is for Voegelin a powerful notion that symbolizes the intermediate state in which man experiences diverse and opposing tensions such as the ones between immanence and transcendence or mortality and immortality. The metaxy constitutes the realm of the divine-human mutual participation (methexis), and its locus resides in human consciousness (nous), there where the divine reality manifests itself as the origin of being. Being the field of intermediation between opposing forces, man has to keep the balance of consciousness in order to differentiate the noetic and pneumatic dimensions and so attune his life to the divine ground of being. This book claims that for Voegelin metaxy shapes the possibility of the philosophical, historical, political and religious orientation in life. Indeed, Voegelin’s approach deserves recognition as an option adequate for addressing the intellectual challenges engendered by modern and postmodern philosophies.
Place
New York
Publisher
Peter Lang US
Date
2021
# of Pages
460
ISBN
978-1-4331-8112-2 978-1-4331-8111-5 978-1-4331-8113-9 978-1-4331-8110-8
Accessed
9/16/21, 1:48 AM
Extra
DOI: 10.3726/b17521
Citation
Duraj, J. (2021). The Role of Metaxy in the Political Philosophy of Eric Voegelin. Peter Lang US. https://doi.org/10.3726/b17521