6533b860fe1ef96bd12c3bd0
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Self-care and total care: the twofold return of care in twentieth-century thought
Jussi Backmansubject
PsychoanalysisMichel foucault0603 philosophy ethics and religionChristianityhoitoHeidegger Martinfilosofiaself-carehoitomenetelmät0502 economics and businesscareSociologyhellenistic philosophy05 social sciencesReligious studies06 humanities and the artsChristianityPhilosophyFoucault MichelSloterdijk PeteritsehoitoSelf careTotal careHellenistic philosophy060301 applied ethics050203 business & managementhellenismikristinuskodescription
The paper studies two fundamentally different forms in which the concept of care makes its comeback in twentieth-century thought. We make use of a distinction made by Peter Sloterdijk, who argues that the ancient and medieval ‘ascetic’ ideal of self-enhancement through practice has re-emerged in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, particularly in the form of a rehabilitation of the Hellenistic notion of self-care (epimeleia heautou) in Michel Foucault’s late ethics. Sloterdijk contrasts this return of self-care with Martin Heidegger’s concept of being-in-the-world as ‘total care’ (Sorge), an utterly ‘secularized’ understanding of the human being as irreducibly world-embedded that rejects the classical ascetic ideal of world-secession. We examine further the historical roots and emergence of these contrasting contemporary reappropriations of care in the Western tradition of thought and show them to be rooted in two different ontologies and ethics of the self as either world-secluded or world-immersed, autonomous or constitutively relational. The historical point of divergence of these two approaches to care, we argue, can be found in the Christian transformation of Hellenistic ethics. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-05-26 | International Journal of Philosophy and Theology |