Foucault, el liberalismo y la crítica de la filosofía política

  1. Mario Domínguez Sánchez 1
  1. 1 Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España
Revista:
Tabula Rasa: revista de humanidades

ISSN: 1794-2489

Ano de publicación: 2012

Número: 16

Páxinas: 187-212

Tipo: Artigo

DOI: 10.25058/20112742.117 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAcceso aberto editor

Outras publicacións en: Tabula Rasa: revista de humanidades

Resumo

In avoiding modern and contemporary political philosophy’s dicomotized abstractions, Michel Foucault has not intended to rebuild a transcendental, rational and normative whole, or rationally legitimate values, but to study the practices themselves in a given society, and the changes they generate. Stressing the individual’s self-shaping practices displays in front of us a whole dynamic view of subject and freedom, which make up an inverse face of «docile bodies», or those of the subject emerged from the grid power/knowledge. Foucault’s genealogy may be broadened to demonstrate liberalism is a set of practices for subject constitution. It is a liberalism, which —after creating the police program to produce person categories—, is able to provide the conditions necessary for the game of freedom and to regulate behavior in terms of corporativity