The Monstrous, Catastrophe, and Ethical Life

Philosophy Today 59 (1):61-72 (2015)
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Abstract

The purpose of this essay is to look at the ethical concerns and sensibilities that emerge out of Hegel and Heidegger’s respective interpretations of Antigone. Curiously, both of them turn to this ancient Greek tragedy in order to lay out the foundations of ethical life and the complexities of such a life in the present historical moment. The argument here in the end is that both Hegel and Heidegger find the lesson of the radical singularity defining ethical life to be a key to what one sees in Antigone. Both see this above all in the role of death in the tragedy. Both focus upon questions of mourning, burial, and of the dead body. My suggestion is that birth too needs to be understood as confronting us with the problem of our being in the singular, our being an idiom among other idioms.

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Dennis Schmidt
Western Sydney University

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Thinking What Is Strange and Dangerous: Heidegger, Tragedy, and Original Ethics.Robert Gall - 2022 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 14 (3):266-280.

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