Vivre, pour vivre ensemble
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5195/errs.2023.624Keywords:
Ricœur, Hermeneutical Phenomenology, Anthropology, New, IntersubjectivityAbstract
According to Paul Ricœur, “anthropology has become an urgent task of contemporary thought.” The one he develops in all of his work is based on his own hermeneutical phenomenology (the originality of which is due to the heritage of reflective philosophy in particular) to the point that the latter is enough, in our opinion, to draw the main lines of the former. It makes it possible to endow the world with regularities which make it habitable and to endow each human being with a self. It tackles head-on the difficulties of intersubjectivity that Edmund Husserl or Martin Heidegger had left unresolved and makes it a key to his philosophy. People are then more than inhabitants of the world; they inhabit a City that they contributes to build. The theme of the “new” allows us to consolidate one of the lessons that we can draw from Ricœur’s work: to live together, we must live. Ricœurian anthropology then does not require any added ethics for this vitalist impetus to appear via its hermeneutic phenomenology.
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