Vladimir Jankélévitch and the Question of Forgiveness
- Editors:
- Publisher:
- 2013
Summary
The essays focus on the work of Vladimir Jankélévitch as a moral philosopher, particularly that aspect of his work dealing with the question of forgiveness. They treat topics such as the place of moral philosophy in relation to his work as a whole, his relationship to contemporary French thought, and the backgrounds of classical Judaic tradition and world literature. The centerpiece of this tableau is Jankélévitch’s book Le Pardon (Forgiveness).
Chief among the distinguishing characteristics is its rigorous defense of what might be termed a forgiveness free of the entanglements that taint the common understanding of forgiveness—what Jankélévitch refers to as pseudo-forgiveness. The advocacy of forgiveness in the name of political or social expediency, as well as the psychological benefit for the victim, are similarly repudiated.
In their place, Jankélévitch substitutes a radical forgiveness that is “initial, sudden, spontaneous”—not able to erase the past, but able to create a new future and, thereby, a new relationship to the past. He does not permit even this future, however, to serve as forgiveness’s justification. For him, beyond all justifications, beyond justice itself, forgiveness is a gift akin to love.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2013
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-7391-7667-2
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-7391-7668-9
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 231
- Product type
- Edited Book
Table of contents
- Table of Contents No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- EXORDIUM No access
- 1 Vladimir Jankélévitch at the Colloques des intellectuels juifs de langue française No access
- 2 Jankélévitch and the Metaphysics of Forgiveness No access
- 3 Guilty Forgiveness No access
- 4 The Great Distress No access
- 5 Travelling Light No access
- 6 Forgiveness and Its Limits No access
- 7 Forgiveness and “Should We Pardon Them?” No access
- 8 New Spartans No access
- 9 To Atone and To Forgive No access
- 10 The Ethics of Honor and the Possibility of Promise No access
- 11 “After such knowledge, what forgiveness?” No access
- Index No access Pages 219 - 228
- List of Contributors No access Pages 229 - 231





