Ethics and testimony. Ideas for a comprehensive phenomenology of the “Ethos”
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.4-II.2013.29797Keywords:
Ethos, ethical experience, facticity, testimonyAbstract
The ethos is the phenomenon of morality in its broadest sense. Our programmatic essay sketches the idea of a comprehensive phenomenology of the ethos capable of thinking –non-reductively– its different layers of meaning. We proceed in five steps: first, we claim that fundamental human experiences –in particular, ethical experience– are contingent in nature and that, as a consequence, their truths cannot be grasped by a phenomenologicotranscendental analysis. Second, we describe the notion of ethical experience as a traumatic experience of contact with the Law in its quadruple character: singular, universal, true, and contingent. Third, through a reading of Derrida’s Violence and Metaphysics. An Essay on the Thought of Emmanuel Levinas, we question the alleged preeminence of phenomenology –as transcendental idealism– over ethical discourse and praxis. Fourth, we introduce the notion of (ethical) testimony as the kind of “prephilosophical” narrative able to convey most faithfully the meaning of ethical experience. Finally, we distinguish five fundamental layers of the ethos and, on the basis of these distinctions, we identify some of the specific tasks of a comprehensive phenomenology of the ethos.
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