The Good of Recognition analyzes the polysemy of recognition
operative in the thought of two contemporary French thinkers,
Emmanuel Levinas (1906-1995) and Paul Ricoeur (1913-2005). Author
Michael Sohn shows that recognition--a concept most often
associated with Hegel's works--appears prominently throughout the
works of Levinas and Ricoeur, which exist at the intersection of
phenomenology, ethics, politics, and religion. Sohn situates
recognition in the sociopolitical context of Levinas and Ricoeur
and excavates the philosophical and religious sources that
undergird the two thinkers' use of recognition before
contextualizing recognition within the broader themes of their
thought.
By reflecting on phenomenology, ethics, and religion in The Good
of Recognition, Sohn not only shows how Levinas and Ricoeur
articulated a response to the pervasive problems of nonrecognition
and misrecognition in their day but also suggests how their thought
can contribute to a better understanding of our contemporary social
and political landscape.
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