Argues that friendship is the gift of a world that is not one's own and that transforms one's world in unforeseeable ways.
The Promise of Friendship investigates what makes friendship possible and good for human beings. In dialogue with authors ranging from Aristotle and Montaigne to Proust, Levinas, and Derrida, Sarah Horton argues that friendship is suited to our finitude-that is, to the limits within which human beings live-and proposes a novel understanding of friendship as translation: friends translate the world for each other so that each one experiences the world not as the other does but in light of the friend's always-unknowable experience. The very distance between friends that makes it impossible for them to know each other wholly also makes it possible for them to be transformed by friendship. Friendship, then, is possible and good for those who love precisely that they can never wholly know the friend. Friendship is a profound, mutual self-giving that highlights the irreplaceability of each person, fundamentally shapes the self, and is one of the greatest joys of human existence.
ISBN: | 9781438495163 |
Publication date: | 2nd May 2024 |
Author: | Sarah Horton |
Publisher: | SUNY Press an imprint of State University of New York Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 223 pages |
Series: | SUNY Series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy |
Genres: |
Phenomenology and Existentialism Structuralism and Post-structuralism Ethics and moral philosophy Theology Topics in philosophy Literature: history and criticism |