Category Archives: Max Weber

Stephen Turner’s Unfinished Work: Gaps, Needed Boldness, and a Freer Intellectual Trajectory

Stephen Turner’s reconstruction of democratic theory begins as an act of intellectual hygiene. Strip away the myths. Discard the will of the people, justice, and the rule of law as normative ideals. What remains is procedure. Law is a hierarchy … Continue reading

Posted in Carl Schmitt, Democracy, DSM, Martin Gurri, Max Weber, Opiods, Stephen Turner | Comments Off on Stephen Turner’s Unfinished Work: Gaps, Needed Boldness, and a Freer Intellectual Trajectory

The Skittle Boy Problem: Weber, Bureaucracy, and the Crisis of Liberal Democracy

Max Weber never intended his analysis of the 1905 Russian crisis to serve as a forecast. He thought he was describing a limiting case, a political situation so extreme that it clarified the general mechanics of bureaucratic power in ways … Continue reading

Posted in Australia, Bureaucracy, Democracy, Iran, Max Weber, Russia | Comments Off on The Skittle Boy Problem: Weber, Bureaucracy, and the Crisis of Liberal Democracy