Certain exceptions, it is said, prove the rule. This has sometimes been understood to mean that identifying a given instance of a phenomenon as exceptional implies the existence of a rule to which it does not conform. The exception may then direct our attention to special circumstances under which the rule does not apply. Alternatively, under an older meaning of the word ‘prove,’ the phrase suggests that exceptional cases test or call into question taken-for-granted rules or expectations. Given that even analytical or theoretical categories are often freighted with normative or moral significance, the stakes of such questioning may extend well beyond its contributions to scholarly knowledge. And as the history of the 20th century, along with more recent events, has amply demonstrated, the designation of particular cases, circumstances or persons as exceptions has political implications; for instance, a recently prominent strand of political philosophy expands on the idea of the ‘state of exception’ to elucidate the significance of the power to exclude in constituting the political order (Schmitt 1995; Agamben 2005).

The Power of the Norm: Fragile Rules and Significant Exceptions

Eloisa Betti;
2016

Abstract

Certain exceptions, it is said, prove the rule. This has sometimes been understood to mean that identifying a given instance of a phenomenon as exceptional implies the existence of a rule to which it does not conform. The exception may then direct our attention to special circumstances under which the rule does not apply. Alternatively, under an older meaning of the word ‘prove,’ the phrase suggests that exceptional cases test or call into question taken-for-granted rules or expectations. Given that even analytical or theoretical categories are often freighted with normative or moral significance, the stakes of such questioning may extend well beyond its contributions to scholarly knowledge. And as the history of the 20th century, along with more recent events, has amply demonstrated, the designation of particular cases, circumstances or persons as exceptions has political implications; for instance, a recently prominent strand of political philosophy expands on the idea of the ‘state of exception’ to elucidate the significance of the power to exclude in constituting the political order (Schmitt 1995; Agamben 2005).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3472055
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