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(2000) Phenomenology of the political, Dordrecht, Springer.

Taking responsibility seriously

Hwa Yol Jung

pp. 147-165

The concept of responsibility lives in the shadow of the hagiographic life of rights in the modern West.1 Western modernity has privileged rights while handcuffing and marginalizing responsibility. Ours, in particular, is the land of rights talk, and our political and legal thought has been enslaved to and by it. As Amy Gutmann recently points out, "most prominent political philosophers are now rights theorists."2 Today rights talk has invaded and colonized even the nonhuman world of nature: we speak of the "rights of nature" and "animal rights" as well as "civil rights" and "human rights." We are indeed possessed and compressed by rights talk. So-called "retreat" from or the "reclamation" of responsibility is a phantom expression because responsibility has never assumed conceptual prominence or strategic equity with rights in Western modernity.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-2606-1_11

Full citation:

Jung, H.Y. (2000)., Taking responsibility seriously, in K. Thompson & L. Embree (eds.), Phenomenology of the political, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 147-165.

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