Derrida and the Limits of Sovereign Reason: Freedom, Equality, but not Fraternity

Télos 2009 (148):141-159 (2009)
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Abstract

“What must be thought,” Jacques Derrida writes in the closing pages of Rogues, “is this inconceivable and unknowable thing, a freedom that would no longer be the power of a subject, a freedom without autonomy, a heteronomy without servitude, in short, something like a passive decision.”1 To certain readers of Derrida, this passage, coming near the end of Rogues, written some two years before he passed away, would mark the fundamental failure of his thought. “What must be thought …”: an exhortation, an ethical injunction, but seemingly also a final plea at the end of a long career that, many…

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Peter Gratton
Memorial University of Newfoundland

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