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A critical consideration of Foucault’s conceptualisation of morality
The background of this research is the status and significance of an ethics of care of the self
in the history of morality. I followed the following methodology: I attempted to come to
nuanced, critical understanding of the Foucault’s conceptualisation of morality in Volumes
II and III of The History of Sexuality. In the ‘Ancients’, Foucault uncovered an ‘ethicsoriented’
as opposed to a ‘code-oriented’ morality in which the emphasis shifted to how
an individual was supposed to constitute himself as an ethical subject of his own action
without denying the importance of either the moral code or the actual behaviour of people.
The main question was whether care of the self-sufficiently regulated an individual’s
conduct towards others to prevent the self from lapsing into narcissism, substituting
a generous responsiveness towards the other for a means-end rationale. I put this line
of critique to test by confronting Foucault’s care of the self with Levinas’s
primordial responsibility towards the other and put forward a case for the indispensability
of aesthetics for ethics. In conclusion, I defended the claim that care of the self does indeed
foster other responsiveness.
INTRADISCIPLINARY AND/OR INTERDISCIPLINARY IMPLICATIONS : Foucault’s ethics, understood as an
‘aesthetics of existence’ has profound intradisciplinary and interdisciplinary implications, as it
challenges traditional ethical normative ethical theories and engages with various fields of
philosophy, social sciences and humanities. Interdisciplinary fields greatly influenced by
Foucault’s ethics include: psychology, literary, cultural, gender and sexuality studies, medical
ethics, anthropology and history, among others.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY : Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analysed in this study.