1st Edition

Ethics of Hospitality

By Daniel Innerarity Copyright 2017
    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    The source of hospitality lies in the fundamental ethical experiences that make up the fabric of the social lives of people. Therein lies a primary form of humanity. Whether we are guests or hosts, this reveals our situation in a world made up of receiving and meeting, leaving room for the liberty to give and receive beyond the imperatives of reciprocity.

    This book proposes an ethic that promotes the possibility of stirring emotion before that of protecting ourselves from unexpected encounters. Fundamental ethical competence consists of opening up to the wholly other and to others, to be accessible to the world’s solicitations. There is moral superiority of vulnerable love over control and moderation, of generous passion over rational prudence and of excess over exchange.

    Constructing an ethic of hospitality is essential at a time when we are torn between the imperatives of modernization and growth and the demands of concern and protection. The experience we all have today, that of the fragility of the world, is giving rise to a powerful tendency toward solicitude. From such a perspective, the duty of individuals no longer consists of protecting themselves from society, but of defending it, taking care of a social fabric outside of which no identity can be formed.

    Introduction: Paying attention to everything else. Part I. The domain of reception 1. The pathetic or the duty of events 2. The acceptance of people. Identity and committed hospitality 3. The moral spectacle: the pertinence of the absent 4. The chance of good life. The scandalous resemblance between happiness and fortune 5. Homo brevis. Ethics of duration, fatigue and the end 6. The meaning of present life. The particularity of the invited, or about awaiting the universal, uselessly Part II. Dimensions of pity 7. Xenology: prolegomena to the understanding of being stranger 8. Liberality. The virtue of pluralism 9. The time of the others. The human plurality as temporal diversity 10. Ethics and aesthetics of the natural 11. Poetics of compassion: the comprehension of the incomprehensible 12. An economy of hospitality

    Biography

    Daniel Innerarity is a professor of Philosophy at the University of the Basque Country (Spain) and a researcher at the Basque Foundation for Science (Ikerbasque). As a Doctor of Philosophy, he has carried out research in Germany, as a fellow at the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, in Switzerland, Italy and France.