Why Ethics?

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A01=Robert Gibbs
Allegory
Anchoring
Anecdote
Antithesis
Author_Robert Gibbs
Brute fact
Category=QDTQ
Consciousness
Critique
Disputation
Divine law
Edmund Husserl
Empiricism
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Ethics
Etymology
Excommunication
Exegesis
Existence
Felix culpa
Forgiveness
Freethought
God
Good and evil
Historicism
Historiography
Idealism
Idealization
Incorruptibility
Indexicality
Intentionality
Jacques Derrida
Jews
Judaism
Linguistic system
Morality
Newspeak
Nominalism
Not in Heaven
Opportunism
Oppression
Oracle
Oral Torah
Paradox
Performative utterance
Philosopher
Philosophical language
Philosophy
Philosophy of language
Postmodern philosophy
Postmodernism
Pragmaticism
Pragmatism
Presupposition
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Radical empiricism
Radical evil
Reason
Religion
Skepticism
Socratic method
Spirituality
The Philosopher
The True Word
Theology
Theory
Thought
Understanding
Untranslatability
Vagueness
Verificationism
Vulnerability
Writing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691009636
  • Weight: 595g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Sep 2000
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Robert Gibbs presents here an ambitious new theory of ethics. Drawing on a striking combination of intellectual traditions, including Jewish thought, continental philosophy, and American pragmatism, Gibbs argues that ethics is primarily concerned with responsibility and is not--as philosophers have often assumed--principally a matter of thinking about the right thing to do and acting in accordance with the abstract dictates of reason or will. More specifically, ethics is concerned with attending to others' questions and bearing responsibility for what they do. Gibbs builds this innovative case by exploring the implicit responsibilities in a broad range of human interactions, paying especially close attention to the signs that people give and receive as they relate to each other. Why Ethics? starts by examining the simple actions of listening and speaking, reading and writing, and by focusing on the different responsibilities that each action entails. The author discusses what he describes as the mutual responsibilities implicit in the actions of reasoning, mediating, and judging. He assesses the relationships among ethics, pragmatics, and Jewish philosophy. The book concludes by looking at the relation of memory and the immemorial, emphasizing the need to respond for past actions by confessing, seeking forgiveness, and making reconciliations. In format, Gibbs adopts a Talmudic approach, interweaving brief citations from primary texts with his commentary. He draws these texts from diverse thinkers and sources, including Levinas, Derrida, Habermas, Rosenzweig, Luhmann, Peirce, James, Royce, Benjamin, Maimonides, the Bible, and the Talmud. Ranging over philosophy, literary theory, social theory, and historiography, this is an ambitious and provocative work that holds profound lessons for how we think about ethics and how we seek to live responsibly.
Robert Gibbs is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. Author of Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas and coauthor of Reasoning after Revelation: Dialogues in Postmodern Jewish Philosophy, he has written widely on questions of contemporary continental philosophy and its relations with Jewish thought.