Schaefer, Max. “Turning the Natural World into a Moral World: Michel Henry on the Vocation of Life”. Human Studies, 2023, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10746-023-09691-5.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Schaefer, Max
Date Issued
2023
Date Published Online
2023-09-29
Abstract

It has been widely argued that Michel Henry dismisses the importance of the subject's worldly and intentional mode of existence in his account of the well-being of life. However, through a careful analysis of Henry's theory of life and his study of culture and barbarism, I will demonstrate that the prevailing position on this point is both correct and incorrect: (i) correct in that absolute life does not require a moral transformation of the world; and (ii) incorrect inasmuch as Henry's philosophy does not, for all that, deny that, from the perspective of human beings, the subject's existence in the world does indeed matter to the well-being of their life. In my view, Henry's work harbours the implication that, from the perspective of the subject's existence in the world, the creation of a moral world through the development of the correspondence between one's inner life and the natural world is humanity's most pressing task, to the point that his entire phenomenology is oriented toward the achievement of this end. I will highlight two of the ways in which the subject's existence is vital to life's well-being: (i) as an expression of life; and (ii) as more or less befitting of life's current needs. As part of this study, I argue that some of Henry's conclusions regarding theoretical knowledge and its part in the aforementioned correspondence between life and the natural world do not entirely agree with his own analyses and therefore need to be reformed.

Language

  • English
Host Title
Human Studies
Host Abbreviated Title
Hum Stud
ISSN
1572-851X
0163-8548

Department