Contributor(s)
Pemberton, Jo-Anne, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, UNSWKeywords
TolstoyPolitical philosophy
Lacan
Other
Social movements
Progressive
Protest
Hypocrisy
Nietzsche
Literature
Philosophy
Love
Truth
Dialectic
Sacrifice
Liberty
Lyotard
Faith
Ontology
Conrad
Ethics
Hugo
Jouissance
Emancipation
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http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/44523Abstract
The thesis develops a comprehensive account of human political ontology through the discussion of Plato, Rousseau, Lacan, Lyotard, Hugo, Conrad, Tolstoy and Nietzsche. At the heart of this account lies the dialectical struggle between an individual's need to belong and their fidelity to an intuitively recognisable, yet difficult to define good (or set of goods), that has, over the millennia, been conceptualised as, amongst other things, the form of the good, self interest, compassion, love, friendship, the event, conscience, reason and truth. Through the development of this account of human political ontology the thesis will elucidate the stakes involved in emancipatory acts, be they broad social movements or individual transformations. Its most important argument is that people almost always fail to recognise that to which they belong; the consequence of this being that they mistake the acts which function to reaffirm their belonging for acts that are indicative of their sovereign being. This phenomenon becomes particularly troubling once we recognise that the acts which function to reaffirm an individual s belonging can depend upon the individual sacrificing both themself and others.Date
2009Type
ThesisIdentifier
oai:unsworks.unsw.edu.au:unsworks:7267http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/44523