La “faille” chez Paul Ricœur. De l’identité symbolique et narrative, à l’identité gestuelle et langagière

Authors

  • Guilhem Causse Centre Sèvres, Facultés jésuites de Paris

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/errs.2018.444

Keywords:

Fault, Myth, Rite, Identity, Gesture

Abstract

In Fallible man, Ricœur discovers a faille (fault, breach, rift) in the heart of man. Due to this faille, man is fragile: he has to mediate between himself and the world. This mediation puts man at risk of losing himself. Thus, fragile man is also fallible. In Oneself as Another, Ricœur returns to this faille that passes through the heart of the self, between idem and ipse, giving access to the alter. This image, the faille, guides Ricœur in each of these two texts. It gives us access to their continuity but also to the gap that separates one from the other. But if this image has inspired Ricœur, it also gives us the opportunity to criticize his work. Re-reading the Symbolism of Evil, we will highlight a dimension of man little explored by Ricœur and that our current situation pushes us to rediscover: the body and gesture.

Author Biography

Guilhem Causse, Centre Sèvres, Facultés jésuites de Paris

Doyen de la Faculté de philosophie

Professeur

Published

2019-02-15

Issue

Section

Articles