ABSTRACT

Adjudication between conflicting normative universes that do not share the same vocabulary, standards of rationality, and moral commitments cannot be resolved by recourse to traditional principles. Such cases are always in a sense tragic. And what is called for, in our pluralistic and conflictual world is not to be found, as many would suppose, in an impersonal set of procedures with which all participants could be treated as having rationally agreed. The very idea of such a neutral system is an illusion. Rather, what is needed, Julen Etxabe argues in this book, is a heightened awareness of the difficulty of judgment. The Experience of Tragic Judgments draws upon Sophocles’ play Antigone in order to consider this difficulty and the virtues that attend its acknowledgment. Based on the transformative experience that the audience undergoes in engaging with this play what is proposed is a reconceptualization of judgment: not as it is generally thought to occur in a single isolated moment, like the falling of an axe, but rather as an experience that develops in and through space and time.

chapter Chapter 1|26 pages

A window on the normative world

chapter Chapter 2|22 pages

Antigone, Part I: Beginnings

chapter Chapter 3|22 pages

Incommensurability and judgment

chapter Chapter 4|19 pages

Antigone, Part II: Transitions

chapter Chapter 5|31 pages

Acts of reading, acts of judgment

chapter Chapter 6|19 pages

Antigone, Part III: Realizations

chapter Chapter 7|33 pages

The temporalities of judgment: Antigone and law