Outside Ethics brings together some of
the most important and provocative works by one of the
most creative philosophers writing today. Seeking to
expand the scope of contemporary moral and political
philosophy, Raymond Geuss here presents essays bound by
a shared skepticism about a particular way of thinking
about what is important in human life--a way of thinking
that, in his view, is characteristic of contemporary
Western societies and isolates three broad categories of
things as important: subjective individual preferences,
knowledge, and restrictions on actions that affect other
people (restrictions often construed as ahistorical
laws). He sets these categories in a wider context and
explores various human phenomena--including poetry, art,
religion, and certain kinds of history and social
criticism--that do not fit easily into these categories.
As its title suggests, this book seeks a place outside
conventional ethics. Following a brief introduction,
Geuss sets out his main concerns with a focus on ethics
and politics. He then expands these themes by discussing
freedom, virtue, the good life, and happiness. Next he
examines Theodor Adorno's views on the relation between
suffering and knowledge, the nature of religion, and the
role of history in giving us critical distances from
existing identities. From here he moves to aesthetic
concerns. The volume closes by looking at what it is for
a human life to have "gaps"--to be incomplete, radically
unsatisfactory, or a failure.
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