This book provides a reconstructive and critical interpretation of Sartre's mature dialectical ethics. Taken together, as Sartre intended, the posthumously published key texts demonstrate that the ultimate goal of praxis is "integral humanity" and that "making the human" is always possible because t
Reading Sartre's Second Ethics: Morality, History, and Integral Humanity
✍ Scribed by Elizabeth Bowman, Robert Stone
- Publisher
- Lexington Books
- Year
- 2023
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 425
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
In Reading Sartre’s Second Ethics, Elizabeth A. Bowman and Robert V. Stone provide a comprehensive, reconstructive, and critical interpretation of Jean-Paul Sartre’s mature dialectical ethics. The key Sartrean texts are two posthumously published lectures, one delivered at the Gramsci Institute in Rome in 1964, the other scheduled to be delivered at Cornell University in 1965 but cancelled by Sartre in protest of U.S. foreign policy. Though different in content, method, and intended audience, Sartre gave both lectures the shared title “Morality and History.” As Bowman and Stone argue, these texts comprise a single, systematic ethic in two parts. The Cornell lecture focuses primarily on a regressive and phenomenological analysis of normativity and its ambiguous place in lived moral experience; the Rome lecture focuses primarily on a progressive and dialectical synthesis of the ends or goals of historical conduct. Taken together, the two texts demonstrate that “integral humanity” is always possible because the means to it can always be freely invented.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Contents
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Abbreviations
The Second Ethics: A Heuristic and Critical Prospectus
Unveiling Socialism’s “Ethical Structure”
The Phenomenological Moment: What Morality Is Made Of
The Everyday Experience of Morality
The Types of Norms and What They Share
The Regressive Moment: How Morality Is Lived
The Livability of Norms I
The Livability of Norms II
Invention I
Invention II
The Progressive Moment: The Paradox of Ethos and the Means beyond It
The Paradox of Ethos I
The Paradox of Ethos II
The Root of Ethics I
The Root of Ethics II
Humanity Is Always Possible
“Socialist Morality” and the Conduct of Revolution
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the Authors
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