Sami Pihlström, Sari Kivistö
ISBNs: 3031355601, 978-3031355608, 9783031355608, B0C7FRQ7MM
English | 2023 | Original PDF | 110 Pages
This book argues that no ethically appropriate relation to other
human beings is possible unless we treat them as genuinely other. The
authors provide reasons to be critical of various attempts, many of
them popular in our contemporary (Western) culture, to encourage deeper
attachment to and immersion into others’ lives and experiences. They
defend the significance of the distance between human beings,
criticizing exaggerated uses of, e.g., the concept of empathy and
related concepts in academic as well as more popular ethical contexts,
across a range of issues from the nature of ethical duty to the
philosophy of love.
The chapters offer non-technical
philosophical and cultural criticism through selected perspectives on
the continuum between closeness and distance, exploring various aspects
of ethically significant relations between human beings. This book
thus appeals to a wide audience, especially researchers and students in
different fields of the humanities, including philosophy, literary
studies, and cultural studies, by combining philosophical and literary
methodologies in a humanistic examination of the value of distance. The
book also argues that we have to be able to abstract from the concrete
other in ethical relations, living in the normative and rational
sphere of duty instead of emotional immersion.