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238 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1994
What concerns us most of all here, however, is that in the biopolitical horizon that characterizes modernity, the physician and the scientist move in the no-man's-land into which at one point the sovereign alone could penetrate.
While in Hesiod the nomos is still the power that divides violence from law and, with it, the world of beasts from the world of men, and while n Solon the ‘connection’ of bia and dike contains neither ambiguity nor irony, in Pindar – and this is the know that he bequeaths to Western political thought and that makes him, in a certain sense, the first great thinker of sovereignty – the sovereign nomos is the principle that, joining law and violence, threatens them with indistinction. (25)I.e., “the sovereign is the point of indistinction between violence and law” (id.).
If our hypothesis is correct, sacredness is instead the originary form of the inclusion of bare life in the juridical order, and the syntagm homo sacer something like the originary ‘political’ relation, which is to say, bare life insofar as it operates as an inclusive exclusion as the referent of the sovereign decision. Life is sacred only insofar as it taken into the sovereign exception. (53-54)Early Roman crimes that warranted the culleus, say, “do not, therefore, have the character of a transgression of a rule”; they are rather “the originary exception in which human life is included in the political order in being exposed to an unconditional capacity to be killed”—i.e., “their cancellation or negation is the constitutive act of the city (and this is what the myth of the foundation of Rome, after all, teaches with perfect clarity” (54).