
Shaping a Modern Ethics
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The short answer is no; and most people, being tolerant, would probably agree with this answer. Yet most people, precisely in being tolerant, also subscribe to an idea of "human rights" which presupposes just such a universal ethics.
This basic question of ethics is similarly treacherous when approached on a higher technical level. Specialists have long recognized that Kant's categorical imperative is neither theoretically nor practically tenable. But efforts to revive and repair the Kantian project-including especially the monumental work of Jürgen Habermas-have all themselves been theoretically questionable, while developing a complexity that makes them impractical.
Must we then simply do without ethics in the sense of a universal ethical method?
By way of a close study of literary and philosophical texts, from Freud to Machiavelli, Benjamin Bennett shows why the failure of a universal or propositional ethics is indeed unavoidable. He uncovers a modern non-propositional ethics that cannot be grasped in a single theoretical move but can only be approached as a collection of instances of a modern ethical "we", three key examples of which Bennett explores in this book:
- The "we" of irony, whose speakers share a strictly preter-verbal knowledge which is concealed in their actual utterances
- The insistent exclusive "we" of a group that has neither its own physical locality nor even a clear intellectual identity, comparable to the "we" of Jews in the diaspora
- The "we" of feminism, a separate "we" from that embracing people who happen to have been born women.
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Abbreviations
Preliminary Remarks: Wittgenstein and Strawson
Chapter One: Introduction: Ethics, "Literature," and Irony
Chapter Two: Nietzsche and Rorty: The Ethics of Irony
Chapter Three: Kant and Leibniz
Chapter Four: Lessing: History, Irony, and Diaspora
Chapter Five: Lessing and Freud: Theory, Wisdom, and the Scope of Ethics
Chapter Six: Habermas, Rorty, and Machiavelli
Chapter Seven: Woolf, Bachmann, Wittig: Toward a Feminist Ethics
Conclusion, or Not
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