Abstract

The striving for self-worth is recognized as a driving force in international relations; but if self-worth is understood as a function of status in a power hierarchy, this striving often is a source of anxiety and conflict over status. The quasi-international relations within the early modern German Empire have prompted seventeenth-century natural law theorists such as Samuel Pufendorf and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz to reflect about this problem. In his De statu imperii Germanici (1667), Pufendorf regards the power differences and dependencies between the Reichsstände to be an expression of the deficits of constitutional structure of the Empire—a structure that, in his view, causes internal division because it leads to distorted practices of esteem between the estates. Against Pufendorf, Leibniz argues De jure suprematus ac legationis (1671) that political actors such as the German princes who are not Electors could fulfill functions under the law of nations such as forming confederations and peace keeping. Incoherently, however, Leibniz excludes less powerful estates such as the Imperial cities and the Hanseatic cities from the ensuing duties of esteem. This shortcoming, in turn, is arguably remedied in Pufendorf’s later considerations concerning duties of esteem in diplomatic relations.

Highlights

  • To some, it may seem inevitable to think of esteem in international relations as a function of power—those nations with more power will make claims to higher esteem

  • While such muddled constitutional situations have not disappeared from the planet, they were pervasive in the early modern German Empire

  • Relations of feudal dependence have disappeared from large parts of the planet; and certainly, we will be unmoved by the particular political agenda in which Leibniz was involved in the service of the house of the Guelfs

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Summary

Introduction

It may seem inevitable to think of esteem in international relations as a function of power—those nations with more power will make claims to higher esteem.

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