Substitution

Philosophy and Theology 4 (2):171-185 (1989)
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Abstract

The subject is under siege. In many disciplines the self that modem thought established and fortified has fallen to critique. But while many explore the implications for epistemology, for literary theory, for psychology, or for history and social thought, few writers have pondered the question in terms of ethics. After all, ethics must rest on a subject, a person who makes choices and decides for various reasons to commit acts in one’s own name. l suggest that ethics can survive the fracturing, de-centering, deconstructing of the self? A selection of passages from Marcel and Levinas is offered, with commentary.

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