Karman: A Brief Treatise on Action, Guilt, and Gesture

Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. Edited by Adam Kotsko (2016)
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Abstract

What does it mean to be responsible for our actions? In this brief and elegant study, Giorgio Agamben traces our most profound moral intuitions back to their roots in the sphere of law and punishment. Moral accountability, human free agency, and even the very concept of cause and effect all find their origin in the language of the trial, which Western philosophy and theology both transform into the paradigm for all of human life. In his search for a way out of this destructive paradigm, Agamben not only draws on minority opinions within the Western tradition but engages at length with Buddhist texts and concepts for the first time. In sum, Karman deepens and rearticulates some of Agamben's core insights while breaking significant new ground.

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Citations of this work

The impurity of praxis: Arendt and Agamben.Katarina Sjöblom - 2023 - Continental Philosophy Review 56 (1):145-162.
Agamben’s Politics of the Performative.Katarina Diana Sjöblom - forthcoming - Theory, Culture and Society.
The Symbol of the Mask.Julio Martín Alcántara Carrera - 2022 - Resistances. Journal of the Philosophy of History 3 (5):e21088.

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