Stein has some masterful insights to share, and she properly uses what phenomenology calls "eidetic analysis" on the state--isolating the concept of a thing to its necessary attributes. While the language is complicated, and there are huge problems left unsolved (for example, basically throwing her hands up at the relationship between the sovereignty of the state and the sovereignty of God) she has quite a few interesting ideas to share. She seems to provide a better explanation of the origins of the state than social contract theory (arising from a community to form a culture), she fascinatingly claims that a state could exist entirely without land (for all the organizational needs of a state could be met without it, so long as the needs of the non-physical citizens were met) and most fascinatingly of all, proposes that the chief value of the state is its personal and inherent value. Sure, a state can help meet the human ends of life or achieve justice, but its chief value lies in being what it is, a component of the "person" of a culture. There is something deeply right about this, and it begs further reflection.