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Relationals - ebook
Relationals - ebook
In a world increasingly beset by climate change, pollution, epidemics, extinctions, and ever more generalized violence, more thoughtful and effective collective responses are needed. Were some persons, institutions, and communities, to change their most basic priorities from mainly preserving individual and social privileges to serve the communal and fundamental relational values of all, both history and experience show that emergent, innovative solutions to global problems would become more probable.
The issue of understanding and then changing basic priorities is framed here by two crucial contemporary debates centred around the relationship between language and personhood. The first is largely the preserve of archeologists and paleontologists and concerns specifying the moment when a person emerges as distinct from a human being, an event marked and guided by the appearance of human language. The second debate engages linguists and philosophers and concerns determining a person’s distinctive capacities for full and not just partial human language uses. This is something more than the kind of full combinatorial language use enjoyed by the later Neanderthals of Lascaux, for example, since it insists on including not just linguistic reflection on the perfomance of impressiove symbolic actions to fully embrace linguistic and philosophic reflection on the nature of symbolic discourse itself. My hope is that this brief empirical and philosophical essay will provide further insights into the significance of these two debates and help bring about some fundamental changes in our understanding of the true nature of persons as essentially relational beings rather than as exclusively individual or social entities.
Peter McCormick is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (Ottawa) and Permanent Member of the Institut International de Philosophie (Paris). Formerly Professor of Philosophy at the University of Ottawa, he is Fürst Franz Josef and Fürstin Gina Emeritus Professor of Moral Philosophy of the Internationale Akademie für Philosophie im Fürstentum Liechtenstein.
Kategoria: | Filozofia |
Zabezpieczenie: |
Watermark
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ISBN: | 978-83-7886-550-6 |
Rozmiar pliku: | 1,7 MB |
FRAGMENT KSIĄŻKI
Restraint’s Rewards: Limited Sovereignties, Ancient Values, and the Preamble for a European Constitution
Moments of Mutuality: Re-Articulating Social Justice in the EU
Aspects Yellowing Darkly: Ethics, Intuitions, and the High European Modernist Poetry of Suffering and Passage
Poverty Among Immigrant Children in Europe (co-author with A. Bhalla)
Eco-Ethics and Contemporary Philosophical Reflection: The Technological Conjuncture and Modern Rationality
Eco-Ethics and an Ethics of Suffering: Ethical Innovation and the Situation of the Destitute
The Negative Sublime: Ethics, Warfare, and the Dark Borders of Reason
When Famine Returns: Ethics, Identity, and the Deep Pathos of Things
Philosophies, Fictions, and the Problems of Poetics
Modernity, Aesthetics, and the Bounds of Art
Heidegger and the Language of the World
Modernities: Essays on Histories, Beliefs, and Values
Solicitations: Essays on Poverties, Discourses, and Limits
The Spirit That We Sought: Essays in Aesthetics
In His Own Arms: Essays on Events, Actions, Persons
In Times Like These: Essays in Ethics: Situations, Resources, Issues
Blindly Seeing? Essays in Ethics: Discourses, Sayings, Sufferings
In the Moment of Your Passing: Essays in Ethics, Aesthetics, and Metaphysics
Of Three Minds: Essays in Ethics: The Political, the Social, the GlobalPreface
“Nature. An indefinitely mutable term, changing as our scientific conception of the world changes, and often best seen as signifying a contrast with something considered not part of nature.”
S. Blackburn
“Ground. A metaphysical priority relation distinct from causation ... Grounding is often considered to obtain between facts, i.e., if fact x is grounded in fact y, then y metaphysically explains fact x.”
T. E. Tahko
Relational. “The general kind of objects that do the discerning in all cases form a category that has received little if any attention in metaphysics. This category of objects lies between indiscernibles and individuals and is called relationals: objects that can be discerned by means of relations only and by properties.”
F. A. Muller
This short reflective essay is a quite limited attempt to elucidate how the nature of persons is grounded in their fundamental relationality with themselves and others. I will be arguing that, fundamentally, persons are not individuals; fundamentally, persons are relationals.
The historical and cultural contexts here are mainly, but not exclusively, contemporary European, admittedly with all the serious inadequacies of such restricted contexts in more global times. And the scientific and philosophical contexts are mainly English language work with, again, all their own insufficiencies in times like these.
The aim is to offer some critical but constructive reflections on the still vague but quite important idea of persons as more than either individuals or members of social groups. Accordingly, the extended argument is that persons are most basically neither individual entities nor social entities but essentially relational entities, both with respect to the unity of their own natures as well as with respect to other persons near and far.
In the jargon of category theory, persons are not then “individuals” in the sense of being absolutely discernible by there being at least “one permitted property that the object has and the other objects lack.” Rather, persons are “relationals” in the sense of being, in an encompassing sense, “objects” that nonetheless do not absolutely distinguish themselves from other objects but do so only relatively. They do so relationally through transitive, irreflexive, asymmetric, and extendable foundational relations.
That is, after reflection I do not think that someone can be a person properly speaking without incorporating one’s essential connectedness both to oneself and to other persons; otherwise, one remains just an individual and/or a member of a group.
The first two chapters, which are largely empirical, set up and then critically explore a contrast between two basic contemporary perspectives on human beings and persons, an exclusively naturalistic one and a non-exclusively naturalistic one. The next two chapters look more closely at the social and linguistic dimensions of human beings and persons. The last two chapters, which are largely non-empirical, assemble some of the fundamental ontological and metaphysical reminders for what are arguably any philosophically tenable not exclusively naturalistic conceptions of persons. An envoi looks briefly at what still seems to be most at stake on such a relational account of what and who and how persons are.
If some readers were to find several of these reflections cogent and persuasive, then perhaps some of their thoughtful and collective responses to such urgent global problems today as vastly increasing migrations, climate changes, extinctions, pollutions, pandemics, growing dangers of nuclear warfare, and ever more generalized violence might very well become more effective.
For once persons, institutions, and communities, were to try to radically change their most basic priorities from mainly preserving individual and social privileges, whether those of the governing or of the governed, to mainly serving the communal and fundamental relational values of all, both history and experience show that emergent, innovative solutions to the most urgent of global problems today would become more probable.
But changing one’s most basic priorities requires something quite difficult, namely changing one’s basic mentality. Given the many interests, forces, contingencies, and given, too, the deep pathos of things, many reflective people today believe that fundamental changes in mentality of such a very general sort are probably impossible. However, this wide-spread, uncritical belief I think is mistaken.
For as some rather recent events demonstrate, such basic changes have already occurred several times. Most evidently, various popular contemporary movements have transformed community and state relationships to the surrounding natural world. Think of the novel ecological mentality with respect to catastrophic decline of the environment and of species, and, to a lesser extent, think also of the novel anti-nuclear mentality with respect to continually increasing global energy needs.
Still, much geopolitical, economic, and cultural practice today appears to show that similar fundamental changes in mentality regarding the true nature of persons as essentially relational and not just individual or social entities are, however necessary, not yet effective enough. The hope, therefore, is that this brief essay might make some difference, however small.
By way of acknowledgements, I owe my sincere thanks for the intellectual challenges, sensible expectations, and institutional support in different ways to the following institutions. The Palacky University in Olomouc in the Czech Republic, and especially to the Vice-Dean of its Theological Faculty, Vit Husek, for ongoing research support and publications, the Akademie international für Philosophie in Liechtenstein, the Ukrainian Catholic University in Lviv in Ukraine, the Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung in Germany, the Institut international de philosophie in Paris, and the Royal Society of Canada in Ottawa. I thank Professor Bartosz Brożek and the Board of Directors of the Copernicus Center for Interdisciplinary Studies in Kraków for accepting this book for publication in their prestigious series. And I also thank Piotr Majorczyk, Aeddan Shaw, Artur Figarski, and Renata Kluska of the Copernicus Centre Press for all their help with the manuscript.
I owe very much to many truly excellent students over the last years and to just as many excellent colleagues. Specifically, I owe quite special thanks to the professional, collegial, and personal support of Adib Aburukin, Czeslaw Porebski, Martin Cajthaml, Mariano Crespo, Volodymyr Turchynovskyy, Ken-ichi Sasaki, Frank Peddle, and Timothy Tackett. Despite the difficulties of different languages, cultures, and professional trainings, their long and unfailing friendship over many years has made this work so much less imperfect than it sadly must remain. Finally, my deepest thanks over many years go to Hélène Bessière and to our family.
Peter McCormick
Paris, Easter 2020