本体论是政治的指南?朱迪思·巴特勒谈相互依赖、脆弱性和非暴力

IF 0.5 3区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY Ergo-An Open Access Journal of Philosophy Pub Date : 2023-03-31 DOI:10.3998/ergo.2624
J. Wearing
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在最近的工作中,朱迪思·巴特勒(Judith Butler)试图发展一种具有实质性规范结果的“新身体本体论”:他们认为,认识到我们共有的身体状况,可以支持非暴力伦理和对平等社会条件的重新承诺。然而,从巴特勒的本体论主张到他们的伦理政治承诺的路线并不清楚:巴特勒所识别的体现的一般本体论特征如何能够引入对行为或政治安排的约束?有人可能会认为,本体论在政治问题上是中立的。在本文中,我重构了巴特勒对这一挑战的回应,认为从本体论到政治有一条有趣而可信的道路。我利用海德格尔的本体论/本体论的区别来阐明巴特勒本体论的核心概念:脆弱性、不稳定性和相互依赖性。我认为巴特勒从本体论中推导出非暴力伦理的核心尝试之一是没有说服力的,它建立在“相互依赖”的本体论和本体论意义的合并上。尽管如此,我认为巴特勒是对的,真诚地承认我们的脆弱可能会让我们对他人的要求做出更积极的回应,放松对坚不可摧和主权独立理想的束缚。这些理想和它们所鼓励的暴力等于否定我们的本体论条件,而承诺非暴力是承认它的一种方式。既然承认失败就是道德上的失败,我们就有责任以承认我们共有的本体论条件的方式行动——即使有人对巴特勒的本体论的细节提出异议,这一普遍结论也会引起人们的兴趣。
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Ontology as a Guide to Politics? Judith Butler on Interdependency, Vulnerability, and Nonviolence
In recent work, Judith Butler has sought to develop a ‘new bodily ontology’ with a substantive normative upshot: recognition of our shared bodily condition, they argue, can support an ethic of nonviolence and a renewed commitment to egalitarian social conditions. However, the route from Butler’s ontological claims to their ethico-political commitments is not clear: how can the general ontological features of embodiment Butler identifies introduce constraints on behaviour or political arrangements? Ontology, one might think, is neutral on questions of politics. In this paper I reconstruct Butler’s response to this challenge, arguing that there is an interesting and plausible path from ontology to politics. I draw on Heidegger’s ontological/ontic distinction to elucidate the central concepts of Butler’s ontology: vulnerability, precariousness, and interdependency. I argue that one of Butler’s central attempts to derive an ethic of nonviolence from ontology is unpersuasive, resting on a conflation of the ontological and ontic senses of ‘interdependency’. Nonetheless, I contend that Butler is right that genuinely acknowledging our vulnerability is likely to make us more responsive to the claims of others, loosening the grip of ideals of invulnerability and sovereign independence. These ideals and the violence they encourage amount to a disavowal of our ontological condition, while commitment to nonviolence is a way of acknowledging
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