Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
decline and fall of Empire is defined not as a diachronic movement
but as a synchronic reality. Crisis runs through every moment of
the development and recomposition ofthe totality.
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With the real subsumption ofsociety under capital, social
antagonisms can erupt as conflict in every moment and on every
term ofcommunicative production and exchange. Capital has be-
come a world. Use value and all the other references to values and
processes ofvalorization that were conceived to be outside the
capitalist mode ofproduction have progressively vanished. Subjec-
tivity is entirely immersed in exchange and language, but that does
not mean it is now pacific. Technological development based on
the generalization ofthe communicative relationships ofproduction
is a motor ofcrisis, and productive general intellect is a nest of
antagonisms. Crisis and decline refer not to something external to
Empire but to what is most internal. They pertain to the production
ofsubjectivity itself, and thus they are at once proper and contrary
to the processes ofthe reproduction ofEmpire. Crisis and decline
are not a hidden foundation nor an ominous future but a clear
and obvious actuality, an always expected event, a latency that is
always present.
It is midnight in a night ofspecters. Both the new reign of
Empire and the new immaterial and cooperative creativity ofthe
multitude move in shadows, and nothing manages to illuminate
our destiny ahead. Nonetheless, we have acquired a new point of
reference (and tomorrow perhaps a new consciousness), which
consists in the fact that Empire is defined by crisis, that its decline
has always already begun, and that consequently every line ofantago-
nism leads toward the event and singularity. What does it mean,
practically, that crisis is immanent to and indistinguishable from
Empire? Is it possible in this dark night to theorize positively and
define a practice ofthe event?
Generation
Two central impediments prevent us from responding to these
questions immediately. The first is presented by the overbearing
power ofbourgeois metaphysics and specifically the widely propa-
gated illusion that the capitalist market and the capitalist regime of
production are eternal and insuperable. The bizarre naturalness of
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capitalism is a pure and simple mystification, and we have to disabuse
ourselves ofit right away. The second impediment is represented
by the numerous theoretical positions that see no alternative to the
present form of rule except a blind anarchic other and that thus
partake in a mysticism ofthe limit. From this ideological perspective,
the suffering of existence cannot manage to be articulated, become
conscious, and establish a standpoint ofrevolt. This theoretical
position leads merely to a cynical attitude and quietistic practices.
The illusion ofthe naturalness ofcapitalism and the radicality of
the limit actually stand in a relationship ofcomplementarity. Their
complicity is expressed in an exhausting powerlessness. The fact is
that neither ofthese positions, neither the apologetic one nor the
mystical one, manages to grasp the primary aspect ofbiopolitical
order: its productivity. They cannot interpret the virtual powers of
the multitude that tend constantly toward becoming possible and
real. In other words, they have lost track ofthe fundamental produc-
tivity ofbeing.
We can answer the question ofhow to get out ofthe crisis only
by lowering ourselves down into biopolitical virtuality, enriched by
the singular and creative processes ofthe production ofsubjectivity.
How are rupture and innovation possible, however, in the absolute
horizon in which we are immersed, in a world in which values
seem to have been negated in a vacuum ofmeaning and a lack of
any measure? Here we do not need to go back again to a description
ofdesire and its ontological excess, nor insist again on the dimension
ofthe ‘‘beyond.’’ It is sufficient to point to the generative determina-
tion of desire and thus its productivity. In effect, the complete
commingling ofthe political, the social, and the economic in the
constitution ofthe present reveals a biopolitical space that—much
better than Hannah Arendt’s nostalgic utopia ofpolitical space—
explains the ability ofdesire to confront the crisis.19 The entire
conceptual horizon is thus completely redefined. The biopolitical,
seen from the standpoint of desire, is nothing other than concrete
production, human collectivity in action. Desire appears here as
productive space, as the actuality ofhuman cooperation in the
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construction ofhistory. This production is purely and simply human
reproduction, the power ofgeneration. Desiring production is gen-
eration, or rather the excess oflabor and the accumulation ofa power
incorporated into the collective movement ofsingular essences, both
its cause and its completion.
When our analysis is firmly situated in the biopolitical world
where social, economic, and political production and reproduction
coincide, the ontological perspective and the anthropological per-
spective tend to overlap. Empire pretends to be the master ofthat
world because it can destroy it. What a horrible illusion! In reality
we are masters ofthe world because our desire and labor regenerate
it continuously. The biopolitical world is an inexhaustible weaving
together ofgenerative actions, ofwhich the collective (as meeting
point ofsingularities) is the motor. No metaphysics, except a deliri-
ous one, can pretend to define humanity as isolated and powerless.
No ontology, except a transcendent one, can relegate humanity to
individuality. No anthropology, except a pathological one, can
define humanity as a negative power. Generation, that first fact of
metaphysics, ontology, and anthropology, is a collective mechanism
or apparatus ofdesire. Biopolitical becoming celebrates this ‘‘first’’
dimension in absolute terms.
Political theory is forced by this new reality to redefine itself
radically. In biopolitical society, for example, fear cannot be em-
ployed, as Thomas Hobbes proposed, as the exclusive motor of
the contractual constitution ofpolitics, thus negating the love of
the multitude. Or rather, in biopolitical society the decision ofthe
sovereign can never negate the desire ofthe multitude. Ifthose
founding modern strategies of sovereignty were employed today
with the oppositions they determine, the world would come to a
halt because generation would no longer be possible. For generation
to take place, the political has to yield to love and desire, and that
is to the fundamental forces of biopolitical production. The political
is not what we are taught it is today by the cynical Machiavellianism
ofpoliticians; it is rather, as the democratic Machiavelli tells us, the
power ofgeneration, desire, and love. Political theory has to reorient
itselfalong these lines and assume the language ofgeneration.
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Generation is the
primum
ofthe biopolitical world ofEmpire.
Biopower—a horizon ofthe hybridization ofthe natural and the
artificial, needs and machines, desire and the collective organization
ofthe economic and the social—must continually regenerate itself
in order to exist. Generation is there, before all else, as basis and
motor ofproduction and reproduction. The generative connection
gives meaning to communication, and any model of(everyday,
philosophical, or political) communication that does not respond
to this primacy is false. The social and political relationships of
Empire register this phase ofthe development ofproduction and
interpret the generative and productive biosphere. We have thus
reached a limit ofthe virtuality ofthe real subsumption ofproductive
society under capital—but precisely on this limit the possibility of
generation and the collective force of desire are revealed in all
their power.
Corruption
Opposed to generation stands corruption. Far from being the neces-
sary complement ofgeneration, as the various Platonic currents of
philosophy would like, corruption is merely its simple negation.20
Corruption breaks the chain ofdesire and interrupts its extension
across the biopolitical horizon ofproduction. It constructs black
holes and ontological vacuums in the life of the multitude that not
even the most perverse political science manages to camouflage.
Corruption, contrary to desire, is not an ontological motor but
simply the lack ofontological foundation ofthe biopolitical practices
ofbeing.
In Empire corruption is everywhere. It is the cornerstone and
keystone of domination. It resides in different forms in the supreme
government ofEmpire and its vassal administrations, the most re-
fined and the most rotten administrative police forces, the lobbies
ofthe ruling classes, the mafias ofrising social groups, the churches
and sects, the perpetrators and persecutors ofscandal, the great
financial conglomerates, and everyday economic transactions.
Through corruption, imperial power extends a smoke screen across
the world, and command over the multitude is exercised in this
putrid cloud, in the absence oflight and truth.
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It is no mystery how we recognize corruption and how we
identify the powerful emptiness of the mist of indifference that
imperial power extends across the world. In fact, the ability to
recognize corruption is, to use a phrase ofDescartes’s, ‘‘la faculteĺa mieux partageé du monde,’’ the most widely shared faculty in the world. Corruption is easily perceived because it appears immediately as a form of violence, as an insult. And indeed it is an insult:
corruption is in fact the sign ofthe impossibility oflinking power
to value, and its denunciation is thus a direct intuition ofthe lack
ofbeing. Corruption is what separates a body and a mind from
what they can do. Since knowledge and existence in the biopolitical
world always consist in a production ofvalue, this lack ofbeing
appears as a wound, a death wish ofthe socius, a stripping away
ofbeing from the world.
The forms in which corruption appears are so numerous that
trying to list them is like pouring the sea into a teacup. Let us try
nonetheless to give a few examples, even though they can in no way
serve to represent the whole. In the first place, there is corruption as
individual choice that is opposed to and violates the fundamental
community and solidarity defined by biopolitical production. This
small, everyday violence ofpower is a mafia-style corruption. In
the second place, there is corruption ofthe productive order, or
really exploitation. This includes the fact that the values that derive
from the collective cooperation of labor are expropriated, and what
was in the biopolitical
ab origine
public is privatized. Capitalism is completely implicated in this corruption ofprivatization. As Saint
Augustine says, the great reigns are only the enlarged projections
oflittle thieves. Augustine ofHippo, however, so realistic in this
pessimistic conception ofpower, would be struck dumb by today’s
little thieves ofmonetary and financial power. Really, when capital-
ism loses its relationship to value (both as the measure ofindividual
exploitation and as a norm ofcollective progress), it appears immedi-
ately as corruption. The increasingly abstract sequence ofits func-
tioning (from the accumulation of surplus value to monetary and
financial speculation) is shown to be a powerful march toward
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generalized corruption. Ifcapitalism is by definition a system of
corruption, held together nonetheless as in Mandeville’s fable by
its cooperative cleverness and redeemed according to all its ideolo-
gies on right and left by its progressive function, then when measure
is dissolved and the progressive telos breaks down, nothing essential
remains ofcapitalism but corruption. In the third place, corruption
appears in the functioning of ideology, or rather in the perversion
ofthe senses oflinguistic communication. Here corruption touches
on the biopolitical realm, attacking its productive nodes and ob-
structing its generative processes. This attack is demonstrated, in
the fourth place, when in the practices of imperial government the
threat ofterror becomes a weapon to resolve limited or regional
conflicts and an apparatus for imperial development. Imperial com-
mand, in this case, is disguised and can alternately appear as cor-
ruption or destruction, almost as ifto reveal the prof
ound call
that the former makes for the latter and the latter for the former.