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Strauss and ‘Straussianism’: From the Ancients to the Moderns?

Robert Devigne

Political Studies, 2009, vol. 57, issue 3, 592-616

Abstract: Do scholars inspired by Leo Strauss adhere to, or diverge from, his teachings as they contribute to turn of the twenty‐first‐century American conservative thought and new conceptions of the American political executive and constitutional order? Analyzing Strauss' view of the twofold task of political philosophy, as well as his position that modern political philosophy inexorably leads to philosophic and moral crises, the scaffolding of Strauss' political outlook – and the dimensions of its contemporary relevance – will begin to take shape. Turning to the writings on America by many of Strauss' most notable students, we discover that most of them point back to the admittedly liberal theories of John Locke and the American founders as the starting point for defining a new conservative outlook that will address the problems of modernity. We are thus confronted by a quandary. How can an important current of Strauss‐inspired scholarship put forth that the theories of Locke and the American founders provide the foundation for addressing a crisis that Strauss states is rooted in that very modernity? We will discover that the thought of Strauss and an important strand of Straussianism are not the same, because Strauss‐inspired scholarship on America adheres to only a facet of Strauss' two‐pronged political philosophy. Strauss, however, cannot disavow responsibility for these students and followers, who embrace an important current of his thinking.

Date: 2009
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https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9248.2009.00790.x

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