Zeitschrift | Ausgabe

Human Studies. A Journal for Philosophy and the Social Sciences 46 (2023), 1

 

Today, in a Western secular context, the affective phenomenon of religious zeal is often associated, or even identified, with religious intolerance, violence, and fanaticism. Even if the zealots’ devotion remains restricted to their private lives, “we” as Western secularists still suspect them of a lack of reason, rationality, and autonomy. However, closer consideration reveals that religious zeal is an ethically and politically ambiguous phenomenon. In this article, I explore the question of how this ambiguity can be explained. I do so by drawing on Paul Ricœur’s theory of affective fragility and tracing back the ambiguity of religious zeal to a dialectic inherent to human affectivity and existence itself. According to Ricœur, human affectivity is constituted by the two poles of vital and spiritual desires which are mediated by the thymos. As I show, this theory helps us to understand that religious zeal as a spiritual desire is neither plainly good nor plainly bad, but ambiguous. Moreover, it enables us to acknowledge the entanglement of abstraction and concretion that is inherent to the phenomenon of religious zeal. Finally, this theory helps us to understand why religious zeal, as one possible expression of the human quest for the infinite, is both a promise and a threat. In conclusion, human existence is tragic not in that we necessarily fail, but in that no matter which path we take with regard to our spiritual desires—that of affirmation, rejection, or moderation—we are and remain fallible.

Religious Zeal, Affective Fragility, and the Tragedy of Human Existence
Ruth Rebecca Tietjen

The Duty of Violence
Frank Chouraqui

Feeling in Values: Axiological and Emotional Intentionality as Living Structure of Ethical Life, Regarding Max Scheler’s Phenomenology
Juan Velázquez

The Motivational Power of Ideas in Institutions and Collective Action
Thomas Kestler

The World and Its Nightmare (Levinas on Sense and Nonsense)
Daniela Matysová

Silence, Attention, Body
Diego I. Rosales

Reading What is Not There: Ethnomethodological Analysis of the Membership Category, Action, and Reason in Novels and Short Stories
Ken Kawamura

An Exercise in “Primitive Natural Science” of Naturally Occurring Types of ‘Ownership
Dušan Bjelić

The Intelligibility of Haptic Perception in Instructional Sequences: When Visually Impaired People Achieve Object Understanding
Brian L. Due, Louise Lüchow

 

Katarzyna Kremplewska: George Santayana’s Political Hermeneutics
Dorota Zygmuntowicz

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