Against Ethics
304 pages
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304 pages
English

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A brilliant and witty postmodern critique of ethics, framed as a contemporary restaging of Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling.


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"Against Ethics is beautifully written, clever, learned, thought-provoking, and even inspiring." —Theological Studies

"Writing in the form of his ideas, Caputo offers the reader a truly exquisite reading experience. . . . his iconic style mirrors a truly refreshing honesty that draws the reader in to play." —Quarterly Journal of Speech

"Against Ethics is, in my judgment, one of the most important works on philosophical ethics that has been written in recent years. . . . Caputo speaks with a passion and a concern that are rare in academic philosophy. His profound sense of humor deepens the passion of the viewpoints he develops." —Mark C. Taylor

"Obligation happens!" declares Caputo in this brilliant and witty postmodern critique of ethics, framed as a contemporary restaging of Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling.


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Publié par
Date de parution 22 octobre 1993
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780253114877
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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AGAINST ETHICS
Studies in Continental Thought
John Sallis, general editor

Consulting Editors
Robert Bernasconi
William L. McBride
Rudolf Bernet
J. N. Mohanty
John D. Caputo
Mary Rawlinson
David Carr
Tom Rockmore
Edward S. Casey
Calvin O. Schrag
Hubert L. Dreyfus
Reiner Sch rmann
Don Ihde
Charles E. Scott
David Farrell Krell
Thomas Sheehan
Lenore Langsdorf
Robert Sokolowski
Alphonso Lingis
Bruce W. Wilshire
David Wood
AGAINST ETHICS
Contributions to a Poetics of Obligation with Constant Reference to Deconstruction
JOHN D. CAPUTO
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Bloomington and Indianapolis
Grateful acknowledgment is made to Persea Books for permission to reprint Paul Celan s Todesfuge, from Poems of Paul Celan , translated by Michael Hamburger, copyright 1988 by Michael Hamburger; and Todnauberg, from Poems of Paul Celan , translated by Michael Hamburger, copyright 1988 by Michael Hamburger. Reprinted by permission of Persea Books.
1993 by John D. Caputo All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standards for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.

Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Caputo, John D.
Against ethics : contributions to a poetics of obligation with constant reference to deconstruction / John D. Caputo.
p. cm. - (Studies in Continental thought)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-253-31313-9 (alk. paper). - ISBN 0-253-20816-5 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Ethics. I. Title. II. Series.
BJ1012.C316 1993
170-dc20
92-41567
3 4 5 99
To Paul, For your golden laughter
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
One
Against Ethics
Two
Between Good and Evil
Three
Dionysus vs. the Rabbi
Four
In the Names of Justice
Five
The Epoch of Judgment
Six
Almost Perfect Fools
Seven
A Happy Event
Eight
Several Lyrical-Philosophical Discourses on Various Jewgreek Parables and Paradigms with Constant Reference to Obligation
Nine
Jewgreek Bodies: An Antiphenomenological Supplement to the Lyrical-Philosophical Discourses
Ten
Otherwise than Ethics, or Why We Too Are Still Impious
NOTES
INDEX
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This is a book with many obligations. My thanks to my students and colleagues at Villanova who have had to listen to this in its various stages and who have reacted with patience and acumen. In particular my thanks to my assistants Matthew Pacholec and Matthew Volta, who read earlier drafts of this study with care and made numerous helpful suggestions. I owe a great deal to Jacqueline Brogan, Walter Brogan, Thomas Busch, Drucilla Cornell, Thomas Sheehan, Mark Taylor, and Edith Wyschogrod for their insightful comments on the penultimate draft. John Tich has been my classical languages consultant.
I gratefully acknowledge the help of Jacques Derrida in loosening my tongue. My reference to Derrida s work would have been even more constant had not his essay on Kierkegaard and the story of Abraham, Donner la mort , in L thique du don: Jacques Derrida et la pens e du don (Paris: M taili , 1992), appeared only after the completion of this book; this deferred gift, which also instructs Levinas on how to read Kierkegaard, confirms my premonition that for Derrida, as for Kierkegaard, ethics ought to be sacrificed in the name of obligation.
An earlier version of chapter 1 appears in Joyful Wisdom: A Journal for Post Modern Ethics , 2 (1992), and I thank Joyful Wisdom Publishing Limited for permission to use parts of this study. The permission of Persea Books to cite Michael Hamburger s translation of Paul Celan s Todesfuge and Todtnauberg is gratefully acknowledged.
I am indebted to a National Endowment of the Humanities Fellowship for College Teachers, 1991-1992, which made possible the sustained work that a book of this sort requires. I owe more than I can say to Rev. Lawrence Gallen, O.S.A., Vice-President of Academic Affairs, Villanova University, whose generous support of my work, now and in the past, exceeds my ability to thank him. Above all, I thank my wife, Kathy, whose patience with my work knows no bounds, who did the artwork for the cover.
ONE
Against Ethics
LOSING A GOOD NAME
I have for some time now entertained certain opinions that I have been reluctant to make public. But I have at length concluded that the time has come to air my views, clearly and without apology, and to suffer whatever consequences come my way.
I am against ethics.
Here I stand. I cannot do otherwise.
But, surely, there is enough immorality in the world, enough unethical conduct in public and private life, without the philosophers coming out against ethics! Would it not be a better and more salutary undertaking, and certainly more in the public interest, to defend ethics against its detractors instead of implicating oneself in damaging its good name?
Against ethics? Does not the ground open up before us? Does one not shudder from the thought? Is one not visited by the worst fear and trembling? 1
I confess to certain misgivings. I have up to now always tried to strike a more respectable pose. Having consorted in the past chiefly with mystics 2 and saints, 3 I have always made it my business to defend ethics, a more originary ethics, an ethics of Gelassenheit and letting be, an ethics of dissemination, a veritable postmodern ethics. 4 I have always protested that if I traffic with anarchy, it is with a very responsible anarchy. 5 Who, after all, wants to be found wanting in the matter of ethics? Who wants to risk having no ethics, or questioning its good name? I am, I have been-until now, when I found my nerve (or lost my senses)-quite intimidated by the word ethics. Its discursive prestige has been too much for me. When I saw it coming down the street, I always greeted it with my very best smile, tipped my hat and bowed in the most courteous way, offering it my warmest salutations. That halcyon time is over now. I will no longer be able to perpetrate this ruse. My neighbors will soon know that I am registered in the opposing party.
Still, unlike Abraham, I am no hero, 6 no fearless explorer of unknown lands, no swaggering venturer on uncharted seas. I think of myself rather as rowing a small boat some distance behind, sticking close to the shores in case a storm blows up, in waters where great and mighty vessels have first shown the way. Up ahead, at the front of the fleet, I see the great Heidegger, a master of thinking, an admirable admiral of bottomless seas and groundless grounds, giving us our heading ( cap ) and setting our course, giving European philosophy the direction it has taken today. 7 It was Heidegger who first put this idea in my head and, if I am charged with impropriety, I will shamelessly blame a great deal on him while pleading for mercy for myself. It was Heidegger who first filled my mind with these impious thoughts about ethics, who first tempted me to consider the idea that we do not need ethics, that there is something to be said for getting beyond ethics, or even taking a stand against ethics:
Along with logic and physics, ethics appeared for the first time in the school of Plato. These disciplines arose at a time when thinking was becoming philosophy, philosophy, episteme (science), and science itself a matter for schools and academic pursuits. In the course of a philosophy so understood, science waxed and thinking waned. Thinkers prior to this period knew neither a logic nor an ethics nor physics. Yet their thinking was neither illogical nor immoral. The tragedies of Sophocles-provided such a comparison is at all permissible-preserve the ethos in their sagas more primordially than Aristotle s lectures on ethics. 8
In Heidegger, this disturbing of ethics is all very beautiful and even oddly reassuring. The task of stepping back from ethics or metaphysics, of overcoming metaphysics or ethics, is undertaken in the name of something more primordial and originary ( urspr nglicher ), something that happened once, long ago, in a time of radiant splendor, a brief but magnificent time, as opposed to the present time of need. 9 For Heidegger, to be against ethics is just as much to be for something more primordial, a more originary ethics, so that one can show one is not being immoral or illogical. That would make it easier to save one s reputation and salvage one s good name.
But the time has also come for me to confess something else, to make a clean breast of everything that has been going on inside me.
I am also against originary ethics.
I confess to having lost all contact with the First Beginning and everything Originary. I have given up hope of catching a glimpse of the last god s passing by in this end-time when the first gods have flown. 10 I do not expect to be on hand for the Other Beginning, which can be granted if and only if one can maintain communications with the First Beginning. I have in short been abandoned, become a part of and a party to the very Seinsverlassenheit against which Heidegger has at length warned us all. Tho

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