Hello /lit/
I'm studying law and politics this year in philosophy
What are authors you would recommend on the subject ?
I'm familiar with authors like Hegel, Plato, Aristotle so I'd like something more niche.
Did Stirner mention politics or something related to it ?
Less known texts by famous authors are also welcome
>>7789143
>Hello /lit/
>I'm studying law and politics this year in philosophy
I'm just law
>What are authors you would recommend on the subject ?
Belloc, Hayek, Kelsen, Kant, Hegel, Locke, Aquinas, Plato, Aristotle.
>I'm familiar with authors like Hegel, Plato, Aristotle so I'd like something more niche.
You are never familiar enough
>Did Stirner mention politics or something related to it ?
No, he's completely irrelevant to everyone outside /lit/
>Less known texts by famous authors are also welcome
The more famous the more relevant. You will never argument from authority on some niche nobody.
>>7789216
>the more famous the more relevant
the aim is to distinguish myself from the other students who will all talk about Rousseau / Hobbes and all that by introducing either more specialized or less known authors in my essays. Also I need to uh go further than the texts I've studied in high school (where we did intensive plato for example) or offer a more precise or original analysis of a famous text
also im doing research on what you mentioned
>>7789143
Alasdair Macintyre.
>>7789216
>No, he's completely irrelevant to everyone outside /lit/
Relevance is a spook, my property.
>>7789224
Hugo Grotius or Torqueville maybe? I mean just open your textbook on any subject and pick an author mentioned at the start.
>>7789232
Relevance is important in law. Especially since laws are spooks.
>>7789143
Go with Bentham and see where the Positivism takes you.
Ronald Dworkin is pretty based.
Viscount Stair is good.