Responsibility in Context, 2010
Perspectives

Coordinator: Ognjenovic Gorana

Language: English

Approximative price 105.49 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Responsibility in Context
Publication date:
147 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback

Approximative price 105.49 €

Subject to availability at the publisher.

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Responsibility in context: perspectives
Publication date:
147 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback
Arne Johan Vetlesen Ours is the era of globalisation. This means that the world is expanding; pressing a key, I can immediately reach persons living in another continent; products travel across the world to the store just around the corner from me; thanks to modern media, I am cognisant of events taking place right now thousands of kilometers away. The world is expanding in the sense that yesterday?s time-space limits are rendered irrelevant; my communications, my needs, my aspirations, transcend all such givens. Whatever confronts me as part of my here-and-now, as making up my present contextuality, I can ? and will ? easily transcend and leave it behind. That the world is expanding means I am expanding, insofar as my range of action, my horizon for thinking, indeed for existing, is perpetually expanding. Expansion as such is forever-happening; it is without limits. This is what we are being told about the nature of globalisation. It rings true; or more to the point, it sounds trivial. But perhaps it is neither. Let?s make a new start. Ours is the era of globalisation. This means that the world is shrinking. It is becoming smaller and smaller. It imposes itself upon me, wherever I go, whatever I undertake to do. It exerts all kinds of pressure from all kinds of directions, on all kinds of levels: psychologically no less than physically.
Responsibility – Introduction.- Question of Responsibility, a Philosophical Exchange with Zygmunt Bauman.- Paradoxes in Kant’s Account of Citizenship.- Political Autonomy and Moral Self-understanding: Kant’s Justification of “Substantive Freedom”.- Responsibility and Global Labor Justice.- A Theory of Indifference1.- Media, Bystanders, Actors.- Temporality and the Culture of Modernity.- Moral Responsibility for Others: Why Does the “Being for” Always Precede the “Being with”.

The importance and polularity of the concept of responsibility: currently highly used

Unique approach: The concept being looked at from the real life situations and there from reflected over

High profile academic names as contributors