By aesthetics logos to the of cultural logos: ethical implications of own body phenomenology

Authors

  • Márcio Junglos

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19177/prppge.v3e62010193-218

Keywords:

Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, Waldenfels, Ethics of the senses

Abstract

This paper will raise issues concerning to a phenomenological ethics. For that, we will seek to find subsidies through the passage of the logos of the aesthetic world to the logos of the cultural world in Merleau-Ponty. One common thread will be determined by this philosopher, with the intent to Artigo referente à dissertação de Mestrado apresentada ao Programa de Pós-Graduação em Filosofia, da Universidade Federal de Santa Maria - UFSM, sob orientação do Professor Dr. Marcelo Fabri. Mestre em Filosofia pelo Programa de Pós-Graduação em Filosofia, da Universidade Federal de Santa Maria. understand the original nature in the life-world. This thread is called original presence which, in turn, can be identified in both the aesthetic logos as in cultural logos. Merleau-Ponty makes a profound analysis of the studies raised by Husserl, namely a later Husserl, where we find the discovery of a phenomenology of life. Through the discovery of reflexive-body, Merleau-Ponty celebrate the incarnation of the phenomenology of life raised by Husserl. These two philosophers give a strong emphasis facing our attitude toward the opening of the world, the other and the logical objectivity. To better understand this philosophical perspective, we have the contribution of Waldenfels that will extend the concept of attitude and will make, thus, a phenomenological ethic more evident, where this attitude needs to give an answer or rather can not not respond, as the opening of the world create in us a challenge of which I am led to a concrete attitude. This challenge is generated by claims that dialogue with the law (rule) and justice (ethics). This dialogue, in principle, generates a strangeness that drives us to a threshold, creating a gap, allowing a new constitution process. When Waldenfels says that the Ethos begins on the plain of the senses, wants to talk that what affects us depends on the body itself that is affected and that what affects expresses sense for us. In other words, what claims out to us as the possibility of meaning indeed passes through the plain of the senses, must be understood and lived by the own body. In Waldenfels we can find a clear responsive ethics and an ethics of the senses, allowing the construction of a phenomenological ethics.

Published

2010-12-30

Issue

Section

Artigos