Ricoeur's Personalist Republicanism

Personhood and Citizenship

By (author) Dries Deweer

Hardback - £90.00

Publication date:

14 August 2017

Length of book:

256 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

239x157mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781498552875

Moral and political convictions never stand alone. They are always connected to an underlying view of mankind. Liberalism, which currently predominates, is connected to a focus on the free individual. Marxism thinks of man in terms of class struggle, determined by economic relationships. Halfway the twentieth century a powerful alternative came about, by the name of “personalism”. This term stood for a social and political thought based on the concept of the human person. This concept stresses that a human being only becomes human in relationship with others and in a commitment to values that go beyond one’s individual interests. Although personalism has an important influence in western society, in philosophical circles it is often regarded as dead and gone. This tension brings Paul Ricoeur to the fore as an interesting interlocutor, because he was considered a representative of personalism in his younger years, while he later on also supported fatal criticisms of original personalism. This book investigates to what extent the thought of Ricoeur bears a continuing stamp of personalism that allows him to instigate a personalist perspective within contemporary political philosophy. The final result lies on three fronts. First, there is more clarity in the status of personalism in contemporary philosophy, as Ricoeur’s hermeneutical phenomenology shows that there are still viable means to elaborate the core ideas of personalism. Second, a personalist kind of republicanism is shown to provide a valuable input in the contemporary philosophical debate on citizenship. Finally, the most tangible result is a deeper understanding of the oeuvre of Ricoeur, in the sense that this book shows that personalism is an important and above all underestimated perspective to understand his entire work.
Ricoeur’s Personalist Republicanism: Personhood and Citizenship by Dries Deweer invites us to rediscover the thought of Ethics and politics of Ricoeur. It is a work remarkable for its clarity and for the intellectual horizon that opens the philosophy of Ricoeur. The great interest of the book is to show that a certain influence of personalism continues to pursue its work in the later political and ethical works of Ricoeur. Deweer's work is both a very good introduction to Ricoeur's thought for the novice and presents an original perspective for the specialist.