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From goodness and care to respect and mutuality

From goodness and care to respect and mutuality. Eivind Meland, Rosendal 05. The power of goodness. Sets the scene Sets the limits of what is true Persons, institutions and initiatives with this label are indisputable. Hannah Arendt and the “luminous samaritanism”.

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From goodness and care to respect and mutuality

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  1. From goodness and care to respect and mutuality Eivind Meland, Rosendal 05

  2. The power of goodness • Sets the scene • Sets the limits of what is true • Persons, institutions and initiatives with this label are indisputable

  3. Hannah Arendt and the “luminous samaritanism” • “How to be good” - Kindness open for public recognition corrupts • Asymmetric relation: The good/ the victim • Both productive and destructive • Charity/ dependence: a threat against self-respect. Grandpa’ teaching Little Tree • Modern paradox: The destructive power of goodness undermines social welfare – the victims support the market liberals

  4. Imbalance of power • Lack of an opposing viewpoint • Critiques of goodness are cynical, self-sufficient or indifferent to the enemies of mankind: cancer, stroke etc etc • Healthism and medicalisation - unopposed • Arendt’s solution: Care and help without compassion. Formal and institutionalized rights (social democratic welfare)

  5. Respect in a world of inequality – Richard Sennet’s view-points • Arendt’s solutions: dependence more respectable but without autonomy and respect • Welfare as automatic rights (linked to disease or illness) may jeopardize self-respect and prognosis • We and our pain: seen by one who cares • How do we provide autonomy and mutual respect within dependency (and asymmetric relations)? • Mutuality: we must ask something in return – reciprocity is the cornerstone!

  6. Respect in a world of inequality – Richard Sennet’s views cont.. • Poverty as lack of connection to others • Mutual does not mean equal • Rituals (give-away-rituals) permit exchange of respect in a world of inequality – the dialogue • Malignant and self destructive inequality: absence of return • Shared & mutual participation innarratives

  7. Autonomy revisited • The confusion between autonomy and independence • Autonomous, dependent and interdependent • Dependence as a fundamental human condition (Dostojevsky: We are all resp..) • Knud Løgstrup: holding something of your fellow human being in your hands

  8. Autonomy revisited contin... • Autonomy as a relational concept (Sennet) • The mutual respect confronted with what you do not understand in your fellow being • Løgstrup: respect towards the solitude of cognition (the zone of nearness) • Shall not intrude this zone with suspicion towards other’s motives

  9. Other threats towards Løgstrup’s ethics for mutuality • Pseudo-friendships (idealisation and seduction) • Exaggerations of patient centredness (I-and-You-sentimentality) • Over-identification and contagionism • Under-identification and group-stereotypes

  10. Løgstrup’s ethics for mutual participation in narratives • Without frankness of speach – human relations will stiffen in unbreakable norms • Complementarity: spontaneous/ respectful • The subject matter must be visible/ hearable – you, I and the subject we discuss (Aristotle) • Nameless – belong to souvereign utterances of life (The prophet: goodness with name will soon change into a curse) • Løgstrup - a theologist with a strong warning against ”christian ethics”

  11. Løgstrup’s ethics for mutual participation in narratives, contin.. • The primacy of trust • The interdependent condition (empirical) • Life as a gift – gratefulness (moral choice)

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