Vision and Order: Eric Voegelin on Society and Social Change

Dissertation, Boston College (1993)
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Abstract

Voegelin's project was to develop a theory of social action and of political order. This enterprise involved an analysis of human experiences of participation in reality. The analysis of experience led Voegelin to a theory of consciousness, understood as the human mode of participation. According to Voegelin, every society attempts to order its institutional life in light of its experience of participation; it is this process that constitutes history. Through symbols, each society articulates its experiences and thereby endows its own order with meaning in terms human and divine. Social life, then, is more than a matter of meeting practical needs; it is also a matter of attunement to the truth of order, i.e., the structure of reality. Thus, at the heart of Voegelin's work is the relationship between the order of reality apprehended in consciousness and the concrete social orders which attempt to embody that order. The question of social change arises when one asks to what degree any society is capable of realizing the truth of order in its institutions and practices. ;The first three chapters situate Voegelin's understanding of society within the context of his thought on reality and consciousness. A fourth chapter emphasizes that the history of attunement is always potentially a history of derailment. Chapters 5 and 6 trace the struggle for order in Israel and Hellas. Given the tension that attends the struggle for attunement, Chapter 7 considers to what extent Voegelin believes social change is possible. A final chapter considers the "resolution" of the problem through Voegelin's emphasis on history as differentiation of consciousness and the vision of transfiguration pointing beyond problems of order. I will also consider how Voegelin's cognitional framework influences his resolution of these issues; in particular how his distinction between consciousness as luminous and as intentional introduces ambiguities into his analysis of society and social change

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John Ranieri
Seton Hall University

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