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Table of Contents
- Contents
- Preface
- 1: Spontaneity and Inertia
- 1. The Background: The Form of the “I”
- 2. “I” and “We,” Singular and Plural
- 3. “I,” “You,” and the “Other”: Dialectical Thought
- 4. Being Together: “We”
- 5. Alienation in Inertia
- 6. Reciprocity in Spontaneity and Reciprocity as Antagonism
- 2: Spontaneity’s Limits
- 1. Tragic Counter-Finality
- 2. Practical Identities, Singular and General: Differing Conceptions of “We”
- 3. Spontaneity within the Revolt of the Oppressed: The Spontaneous “We”
- 4. Actualized Freedom’s Fragility in the Myths of Self-Authorization
- 5. Violence in the Enforcement of Norms
- 3: Ethics in Politics
- 1. Rules, Groups, and Functionalist Ethics
- 2. Active, Passive, or Neither?
- 3. Humanism and Humanisms
- 4. System versus Subjective Life
- 5. Self-Knowledge in the System
- 6. Ethos
- 7. Ethos, Inequality, History
- 8. What Follows Marxism?
- 9. Liberty, Equality, Fraternity, Colonialism, Racism
- 10. Morals on Holiday
- 11. Power, Practice, Practico-Inert
- Dénouement
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
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