In among the most quoted lines of political philosophy is Machiavelli's advice to the prince that he 'learn how to not be good'. Less a counsel to evil than an insistence on the need for a certain political pragmatism, it's to just this spirit that is appealed to here in Raymond Geuss's remarkable collection of essays on thinking 'Outside Ethics'. Pitching itself against a prevailing 'ethics-first' approach to political philosophy (in which politics is cast as nothing but a 'means' to achieve already-worked-out 'ethical' outcomes), Geuss argues for the specificity and autonomy of political action, one whose complexities have been only too easily papered over in the many contemporary approaches to the political.
Indeed, untethered from the ethical, politics, in Geuss's hands, becomes an adventure of almost untrammelled intellectual expansiveness: from poetry to suffering, art to happiness, freedom and religion, Geuss explores all these and more with an eye to what they can teach us 'outside (the constraining perspective of) ethics'. As it turns out, the lessons are almost universally ones of humility; at every point does Geuss seek to make complex our taken-for-granted terms of political discourse, laying bare their changing historical roles and ever evolving conceptual senses, disturbing and displacing the all-too-comfortable intellectual and political nooks into which they've settled.
So incessant is his questioning in fact, that the discussions within would border on pedantry if not for Geuss's almost unrivalled grasp of the Western Tradition (in all it's modes: philosophic, historical, poetic and artistic). When not clarifying and brilliantly parsing out the many complex touchstones of modern political philosophy (the question "in what sense is X to be understood?" marks almost every other page here, along with the accompanying "well, in all following, different senses..."), Geuss remains no less adept in his invocations of say, the art of Albrecht Dürer in discussing virtue, the poetry of Paul Celan in his paper on knowledge, or indeed, every other German philosopher you can think of in talking about, well, just about anything.
As long time readers of Geuss will know of course, it's just this mix of historical astuteness and conceptual perspicacity that has always marked his writing, and it's an art that's taken to a sublime extreme here in Outside Ethics. Although sometimes it might be easy to get a little frustrated at the 'point' of some of these essays - in the wake of all the distinctions, clarifications, asides, and qualifications which Geuss so effortlessly trades among - the book's true value lies in its getting one to recognise that the world of politics - if not the world tout court - just is like that: messy, complex, unyielding, and above all - fascinating. Not unlike a certain book of essays...