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Full Description
How can those profiting from inequality, racism, human rights violations and climate change respond to their complicity in injustice and violence? In this book, Gisli Vogler argues that we need an improved conception of judging complicity under conditions of both plurality and inescapable social conditioning.
Bringing Hannah Arendt's account of political judgement into dialogue with Margaret Archer's theory of social conditioning, Vogler formulates a new framework what he terms an 'ethos of reality' for understanding how people may judge and respond to their entanglement in injustice and violence. Such a theoretical argument is tested through a case study on the complicity of consumers in the plastic pollution caused by the food and drink industries. Additionally, Vogler analyses the interviews and writings of Nobel Laureate Herta Muller, whose lived experience of the Romanian dictatorship constitutes an example of good judgement on complicity. This book persuasively demonstrates the potential for an 'ethos of reality' to contribute to key contemporary debates on complicity and moral responsibility.
Contents
AcknowledgmentIntroduction1. Debates on Complicity and the Problem of Responsiveness2. Judgement and the Potential in Human Plurality3. Judgement following Arendt: From Pluralism to Social Conditioning4. Social Conditioning and Analytical Dualism5. Responding to Complicity through an Improved Ethos of Reality6. Resisting Complicity through an Ethos of Reality in PracticeConclusion: A New Approach to Judging ComplicityBibliography



