Maria-Sibylla
Lotter, ZŸrich
Achtung – Ihre sozialen Grundlagen und Formen
Abstract: The moral quality of social coexistence and
cooperation depends very much on the terms of mutual respect to which the
individuals are entitled. Since this entitlement, by modern philosophy, is
considered to derive from our very qualities as human beings, everyone being
equally entitled to the same amount of respect, it is widely understood to
impose a ban on unequal treatment which we associate with pre-modern cultures.
This modern understanding of respect is commonly supposed to be the true moral
understanding, in contradistinction to the ÒmerelyÓ social understanding of
respect in pre-modern cultures.
The
article aims to present a different view. In distinction to the tendency of
modern philosophers to constrict their investigation of respect to a rather
abstract discussion of the terms of equal respect, I discuss certain concrete
demands of respect which are essential for social cooperation both in modern
and pre-modern cultures, proceeding from the assumption that the entitlement to
respect is grounded on the social need for it. On the one hand, I argue that
the forms of respect must differ corresponding to the social conceptions of
this need. Thus in societies in which the individual is considered an independent,
self-sustaining being, respect demands to exercise restraint, whereas in
societies entertaining the ideas of mutual dependence, respect demands mutual
care. On the other hand, I claim that respect is due not only to the human
being stripped of all her distinctive qualities, but also to the social being
with respect to her roles, and to the individual considered in all her
uniqueness. In short, the real demands of respect cannot be derived from the
abstract idea of equality but presuppose an image of humanity, attention to the
individual and an understanding of the functioning of social institutions.
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