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Voice of Conscience: A Political Genealogy of Western Ethical Experience [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 272 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 546 g
  • Serija: Political Theory and Contemporary Philosophy
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Sep-2013
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • ISBN-10: 1623566789
  • ISBN-13: 9781623566784
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 272 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 546 g
  • Serija: Political Theory and Contemporary Philosophy
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Sep-2013
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • ISBN-10: 1623566789
  • ISBN-13: 9781623566784
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Ojakangas (political thought, U. of Jyvaskyla, Finland) sees a privileged place for the role of conscience in Western theological and political thought and offers an intellectual genealogy of the role of conscience in the Western tradition from antiquity to the present. This genealogy demonstrates a radical continuity, he argues--not the radical ruptures that have been suggested by intellectual historians and philosophers since the 1960s--in which the assumption that people should rely on the inner voice of conscience instead of external authorities, laws, and regulations has been standard in Western thought about political ethics despite historical change and political disputes. His investigation into the place of conscience within political-ethical thought spans a broad chronological and intellectual horizon, from Socrates to Jacques Lacan. Bloomsbury Academic is an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing. Annotation ©2013 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

In Western thought, it has been persistently assumed that in moral and political matters, people should rely on the inner voice of conscience rather than on external authorities, laws, and regulations. This volume investigates this concept, examining the development of the Western politics of conscience, from Socrates to the present, and the formation of the Western ethico-political subject.

The work opens with a discussion of the ambiguous role of conscience in politics, contesting the claim that it is the best defense against totalitarianism. It then look back at canonical authors, from the Church Fathers and Luther to Rousseau and Derrida, to show how the experience of conscience constitutes the foundation of Western ethics and politics.

This unique work not only synthesizes philosophical and political insights, but also pays attention to political theology to provide a compelling and innovative argument that the experience of conscience has always been at the core of the political Western tradition. An engaging and accessible text, it will appeal to political theorists and philosophers as well as theologians and those interested in the critique of the Western civilization.

Recenzijos

In this full and fascinating study of the history of conscience in the West, Ojakangas shows how conscience is the defining signature of Western political thought. Voice of Conscience is a work of immense scholarship leading towards a devastating conclusion: this conscience, invented by Platos Socrates, gave birth to responsibility out of the experience of utter disorientation. -- Philip Goodchild, Professor of Religion and Philosophy, University of Nottingham, UK If you have ever been troubled, ever so slightly, by the resort to conscience at crucial moments of politics and life; if you have ever harboured a suspicion that the conscience is not quite revealing its true colours, then Voice of Conscience is the book for you. Tracing a radical continuity in theories and practices of the conscience, from Aristotle to Obama, this work outdoes Foucault for insight and Agamben for meticulous care with sources, to propose an arresting and extraordinary rereading of the function of conscience at the core of Western ethics and politics. The climax of the book, in which the basis of Western sovereignty is precisely the abandoned outcast, cut free from all ties that bind, reveals both the promise and subtle snares of the conscience itself. -- Roland Boer, Faculty Research Professor, University of Newcastle, Australia. Author of Criticism of Heaven (2007), of Criticism of Earth (2012), and of Lenin, Religion, and Theology (2013) Why has the metaphor of the voice of conscience been such a determining and persistent guide for the entire Western ethical thought? Mika Ojakangas considers it as the fundamental dogma of the Western tradition in ethics, its anti-dogmatic dogmatics, constituting the inner autonomy, conviction and faith beyond all external laws. This comprehensive and meticulously researched work provides an astounding and far-reaching genealogy of this enigma, reaching back to pre-Socratic times, encompassing the Socratic foundational moment, Christianity from church fathers through scholastics to Luther, scrutinizing the modern foundational moment in natural law, Rousseau and Kant, and reaching forth to Heidegger, Freud, Derrida, Levinas and Agamben. The voice of conscience, introducing a measureless measure beyond social and political laws, ultimately aims at the void at the heart of being, yet far from being the firm support it purports to be, there is an agenda of political theology to be unraveled at its core. The most comprehensive account so far, a quintessential reading. -- Mladen Dolar, University of Ljubljana, the author of A Voice and Nothing More Mika Ojakanas demonstrates the different ways, from Socrates to Derrida and Lacan, the same puzzles and tropes reappear by which conscience can be both a source of repression and of our freedom, a foundation of ethical autonomy and basis of law, authority, nation and state. This is a highly readable and impressive work of scholarly erudition that presents the reader with a compelling story of a central feature of how Occidental philosophy, theology and politics have fashioned the way we understand and govern ourselves. -- Mitchell Dean, Professor of Public Governance Department of Management, Politics and Philosophy Copenhagen Business School and author of The Signature of Power (2013)

Daugiau informacijos

This Political Theory and Contemporary Society volume argues that the experience of conscience has always been at the core of the Western political tradition.
Acknowledgements ix
1 Introduction
1(10)
2 National Socialism and the Inner Truth
11(18)
The call of Heidegger's conscience
16(8)
Hannah Arendt and the nihilism of judgement
24(5)
3 Conscience in Moral and Political Theology
29(68)
Church fathers between the law and the spirit
30(10)
Synderesis and conscientia: Scholasticism
40(12)
Divine instinct
52(3)
The spark of the soul: Eckhart and Tauler
55(7)
A voluntarist bias of William of Ockham?
62(3)
The Lutheran revocation
65(9)
The return of the repressed: Spiritualists and pietists
74(5)
Calvin's compromise
79(4)
The Puritan God within
83(6)
On the modern protestant conscience
89(8)
4 Conscience in Early Modern Moral and Political Philosophy
97(28)
The witness of natural law from Suarez to Pufendorf
98(6)
The candle of the Lord: Cambridge platonists
104(6)
A crisis of conscience: Hobbes, Spinoza, Locke
110(15)
5 The Conscience of the Enlightenment
125(50)
The moral sense from Shaftesbury to Smith
125(5)
The judgement of intuitive reason
130(9)
The French experience: From Bayle to Rousseau
139(5)
The German model: Wolff versus Crusius
144(4)
Immanuel Kant and the infinite guilt
148(15)
German idealism: Conscience as conviction
163(12)
6 From Political Theology to Theologized Politics
175(12)
7 Remarks on Late Modern Conscience
187(24)
Internalized coercion: Nietzsche and Freud
188(7)
The voice of the other: Levinas and Derrida
195(8)
Ethics of the real: Lacan
203(8)
8 The Western Politics of Conscience
211(22)
On the Socratic origins of the politics of conscience
213(11)
Conclusion
224(9)
Bibliography 233(16)
Index 249
Mika Ojakangas is Professor of Political Thought at the University of Jyvaskyla, Finland. The author of five books and over 80 articles, his research areas include continental political theory, the history of political and ethical thought, and political theology.