Ethics of the Real: Kant, Lacan

Portada
Verso, 2000 - 266 páginas
The idea of Kantian ethics is both simple and revolutionary: it proposes a moral law independent of any notion of a pre-establishment of fear. In attempting to interpret sucha a revcolutionary proposition in a more 'humane' light, and to turn Kant into our contemporary—someone who can help us with our own ethical dilemmas—many Kantian scholars have glossed over its apparent paradoxes and impossible claims. This book is concerned with doing exactly the opposite. Kant, thank God, is not our contemporary; he stands against the grain of our times. Lacan on the face of it appears to be the very antithesis of Kant—the wild theorist of psychoanalysis compared to the sober Enlightenment figure. His concept of the Real, however, provides perhaps the most useful backdrop to this new interpretation of Kantian ethics. Constantly juxtaposing her readings of the two philosophers, Alenka Zupancic summons up and 'ethics of the Real', and clears the ground for a radical restoration of the disruptive element in ethics.
 

Páginas seleccionadas

Contenido

Introduction
1
The Subject of Freedom
21
2223
30
21
42
From the Logic of Illusion to the Postulates
64
Good and Evil
79
The Act and Evil in Literature
106
Between the Moral Law and the Superego
140
Ethics and Tragedy in Psychoanalysis
170
Thus
249
Index
261
Derechos de autor

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (2000)

Alenka Zupan?i? is a researcher at the Institute of Philosophy in the Slovene Academy of Sciences, Ljublijana

Información bibliográfica