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15 - The Kantian Idea of Europe: Critical and Cosmopolitan Perspectives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2009

James Tully
Affiliation:
Jackson Distinguished Professor of Philosophical Studies University of Toronto
Anthony Pagden
Affiliation:
The Johns Hopkins University
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Summary

Three illustrious historians—Anthony Pagden, Biancamaria Fontana, and John Pocock —have contributed to this volume, and it is not easy to follow them. Rather than advance another survey of ideas of Europe, I would like to accept one of the ideas they present and investigate it from what aspires to be a postimperial perspective. The idea I wish to examine is of Europe as a federation of independent states, and this as a prototype for the rest of the world. It is closely associated with Immanuel Kant and Benjamin Constant. For shorthand, I will call it the Kantian or federal idea of Europe. My thesis is that a survey of the critical attitude that has developed in response to this idea over the past two hundered years will change our idea of Europe and its relation to the rest of the world, from an Eurocentric to a more cosmopolitan conception.

THE KANTIAN IDEA OF EUROPE AND THE WORLD

Recall how Anthony Pagden, Biancamaria Fontana, and to some degree John Pocock presented a wide variety of ideas of Europe from various ages and went on to single out the idea associated with Kant and Constant, suggesting that it remains relevant today. This idea contains five main features. First, Europe is tending toward a federation of independent or sovereign states, each and every one of which has what Kant calls a “republican” constitution: that is, the formal equality of citizens under the law, the separation of legislature and executive, and representative government.

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Chapter
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The Idea of Europe
From Antiquity to the European Union
, pp. 331 - 358
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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