The essay analyzes how Hermann Cohen, Martin Buber, and Walter Benjamin secularize Jewish messianism into distinct yet interconnected forms of modern utopian thought. Cohen transforms the messianic idea into a rational-ethical principle orienting humanity toward an infinite process of moral and social development. Influenced by Gustav Landauer’s libertarian socialism, Buber promotes a dialogical socialism rooted in the communal renewal of life and labour, where the I-Thou relation provides the ethical foundation for social transformation. Benjamin radicalizes this trajectory by articulating a revolutionary messianism in which redemption emerges through the interruption of historical continuity (Jetztzeit) and the recovery of memory of oppressed people. Through this trajectory, the essay retraces a dialectic between restoration and revolution in which Jewish messianism and libertarian utopia converge as critical responses to modernity and alternative models of emancipation.
Tra socialismo e messianismo. L’utopia in Cohen, Buber e Benjamin / Scordari, Chiara Carmen. - In: FILOSOFIA POLITICA. - ISSN 0394-7297. - XXXIX:(2025), pp. 445-458.
Tra socialismo e messianismo. L’utopia in Cohen, Buber e Benjamin
Chiara Carmen Scordari
2025
Abstract
The essay analyzes how Hermann Cohen, Martin Buber, and Walter Benjamin secularize Jewish messianism into distinct yet interconnected forms of modern utopian thought. Cohen transforms the messianic idea into a rational-ethical principle orienting humanity toward an infinite process of moral and social development. Influenced by Gustav Landauer’s libertarian socialism, Buber promotes a dialogical socialism rooted in the communal renewal of life and labour, where the I-Thou relation provides the ethical foundation for social transformation. Benjamin radicalizes this trajectory by articulating a revolutionary messianism in which redemption emerges through the interruption of historical continuity (Jetztzeit) and the recovery of memory of oppressed people. Through this trajectory, the essay retraces a dialectic between restoration and revolution in which Jewish messianism and libertarian utopia converge as critical responses to modernity and alternative models of emancipation.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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