Interlude: Become Who You Are Not (2024)

Hope, Trust, and Forgiveness: Essays in Finitude

John T. Lysaker

Published:

2023

Online ISBN:

9780226827902

Print ISBN:

9780226827896

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Hope, Trust, and Forgiveness: Essays in Finitude

John T. Lysaker

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John T. Lysaker

John T. Lysaker

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Pages

141–178

  • Published:

    October 2023

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OXFORD ACADEMIC STYLE

Lysaker, John T., 'Interlude: Become Who You Are Not', Hope, Trust, and Forgiveness: Essays in Finitude (Chicago, IL, 2023; online edn, Chicago Scholarship Online, 23 May 2024), https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226827902.003.0004, accessed 29 May 2024.

CHICAGO STYLE

Lysaker, John T.. "Interlude: Become Who You Are Not." In Hope, Trust, and Forgiveness: Essays in Finitude University of Chicago Press, 2023. Chicago Scholarship Online, 2024. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226827902.003.0004.

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Abstract

Each of the aphor-essays presented grows out of the tradition of moral perfectionism which includes, but is not limited to, authors like Emerson, Nietzsche, Stanley Cavell, and Eddie Glaude. Instead of normatively regulating for any and all rational agents the use of concepts and dispositions like hope, trust, and forgiveness, moral perfectionism experiments with ordinary and extraordinary usages to articulate and defend a particular way of enacting those concepts and dispositions. This interlude recounts why one might approach an issue in a perfectionist manner, and what doing so involves. In particular, it argues that perfectionism is an improvisational, experimental activity enacted to provide addressees with enriched conceptions whose value can only be assessed through further enactments and reflections. A perfectionist aphor-essay is thus an ethical intervention in ethical life that tries to enrich our ethical resources for approaching complex, often singular tasks.

Keywords: moral perfectionism, improvisation, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Stanley Cavell, Eddie Glaude, Friedrich Nietzsche

Subject

Philosophy

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