Translating God: Derrida, Ricoeur, Kearney

Authors

  • Lynn Sebastian Purcell SUNY Cortland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11575/jah.v0i0.53195

Abstract

The purpose of the present essay is to defend two related notions. The more specific notion that I seek to defend is Richard Kearney’s conception of God as posse, of God as a possible God. His position has recently been criticized for three separate reasons: that it is not radical enough, that it is crypto-metaphysical, and that it forecloses the most profound aims of ethics. At a broader level what seems to be at stake is the opposition between partisans of radical finitude, those who hold that the most profound questions are encountered at the limits of thought, and an alternative “infinite†conception that Kearney shares with Paul Ricoeur, which maintains that fidelity to unpredictable events opens the way to what is most profound about the human condition. In response I argue that the criticisms fail to hit their mark because they presuppose a broadly Derridian or post-modern position in order to make their argument, when it is just those presuppositions that are in question.

Author Biography

Lynn Sebastian Purcell, SUNY Cortland

Assistant Professor of Philosophy

Department of Philosophy

SUNY Cortland

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Published

2012-06-05

Issue

Section

Articles