Argues that a coherent theory of ethics requires an account of
selfhood. According to James R. Mensch, a minimal requirement for
ethics is that of guarding against genocide. In deciding which races
are to live and which to die, genocide takes up a standpoint outside
of humanity. To guard against this, Mensch argues that we must attain
the critical distance required for ethical judgment without assuming a
superhuman position. His description of how to attain this distance
constitutes a genuinely new reading of the possibility of a
phenomenological ethics, one that involves reassessing what it means
to be a self. Selfhood, according to Mensch, involves both embodiment
and the self-separation brought about by our encounter with others-the
very others who provide us with the experiential context needed for
moral judgment. Buttressing his position with documented accounts of
those who hid Jews during the Holocaust, Mensch shows how the
self-separation that occurs in empathy opens the space within which
moral judgment can occur and obligation can find its expression. He
includes a reading of the major moral philosophers-Plato, Aristotle,
Kant, Mill, Arendt, Levinas-even as he develops a phenomenological
account of the necessity of reading literature to understand the full
extent of ethical responsibility. Mensch's work offers an original and
provocative approach to a topic of fundamental importance.
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Alterity and the Phenomenology of Obligation
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780791486696
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
State University of New York Press (SUNY Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter