Who to Turn to
Type de matériel :
94
"The article shows that this is an originary question and not a question that might follow upon recognizing a problem: it comes form a “self” that turns to, trusts someone else, in and for its very existence; the very experience of being “someone”, a “self”, depends on this relationship and this turning “to” someone else. Turning “to the divine” or “to someone”: this distinction questions human experience in the relation of caring for, a vital dimension of this act. For, human experience turns out to be torn inside between an extreme destruction and an extreme creation. However, there are also acts or words in act that appear to bear witness to a possible relationship between humans, beyond their separations and ruptures. Just as some originary acts of taking care, some acts or words respond to those that request among humans a reparation or a witnessing of what remains possible and open."
Réseaux sociaux