Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
12-2019
Journal Title or Book Title
Foucault Studies,
Volume
27
Version
Publisher's PDF
DOI
0.22439/fs.v27i27.5893
Abstract
This article explores the concept of ethical invention in both Jean-Paul Sartre’s and Michel Foucault’s later lectures and interviews, showing that a courageous disposition to invent or transform plays a key role in both thinkers’ visions of ethics. Three of Sartre’s post-Critique of Dialectical Reason lectures on ethics are examined: Morality and History, The Rome Lecture, and A Plea for Intellectuals. It is shown that ethical invention for Sartre requires the use of our freedom to transcend our current circumstances, a willingness to break away from harmful ideologies, and directing our free praxis towards the goal of universal humanism. Examining several of Foucault’s interviews alongside his lecture series The Government of Self and Others and The Courage of Truth,it is shown that ethical invention for Foucault requires a rejection of necessities or inevitabilities in our current landscape, a willingness to reshape our current beliefs, and a philosophical way of life that results in an alteration of the relationship to self and others. For both thinkers, ethical inven-tion should be preceded by a critical reflection on ourselves in our historical moment. Both argue that ethical invention requires a rejection of the inherent value of our world and realization that the conditions of possibility for being subjects are malleable.Last, it is shown that both philoso-phers specifically call philosophers or intellectuals to invent.
Related Pillar(s)
Study
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Engels, Kimberly S. PhD, "Ethical Invention in Sartre and Foucault: Courage, Freedom, Transformation" (2019). Faculty Works: PHI (2010-2021). 4.
https://digitalcommons.molloy.edu/phil_fac/4