- Politics as a Vocation
"Politics as a Vocation" ("Politik als Beruf") was a
lecture given byMax Weber , a Germaneconomist and sociologist to the students of the Munich University in January 1919 and published in October of the same year. The original edition was published in German, but varioustranslation s to English exist.In this essay Weber states the
definition of thestate that has become so pivotal to Western social thought: that the state is thatentity which claims amonopoly on the legitimate use of physical force , which it may nonetheless elect to delegate as it sees fit. Politics is to be understood as any activity in which the state might engage in order to influence the relative distribution of force. Politics thus comes to obtain two power-based concepts, to be understood as deriving of power. Apolitician must also not be a man of the "trueChristian ethic " (understood by Weber as being the "Ethic of the Sermon of the Mount" - that is to say, the heeding of the injunction to turn the other cheek). An adherent of such an ethic should be understood to be asaint (for it is only a saint, according to Weber, that should find such an ethic a rewarding one). The political realm is no realm for saints. A politician should marry the ethic ofultimate end s and the ethic of responsibility, and must possess both passion for his vocation and the capacity to distance himself from the subject of his exertions (the governed).ee also
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Monopoly on the legitimate use of physical force
*Sociology
*Politics External links
* [http://www.ne.jp/asahi/moriyuki/abukuma/weber/lecture/politics_vocation.html Online ebook of Politics as a Vocation]
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