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What Respect Leaves Out: An Essay on Moral Adequacy and Presence

by Gavin Doyle
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Current price ₹1,759.00
Original price ₹2,469.00
Original price ₹2,469.00
Original price ₹2,469.00
(-29%)
₹1,759.00
Current price ₹1,759.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9781971828046
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Statera Press
  • Publisher Imprint: Statera Press
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 204
  • Original Price: GBP 18.99
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 323 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): Ethics & Moral Philosophy

What Respect Leaves Out is a sustained philosophical essay on a quiet failure within morally serious lives: the gap between meeting one's obligations and inhabiting one's relations. Drawing on a long career of reflection and the experience of looking back across decades of teaching, friendship, and family life, Gavin Doyle examines how careful people may behave honorably toward one another while remaining, in some essential sense, unreachable.

The book argues that the modern moral tradition, organized around the protection of persons against the characteristic dangers others pose, has become extraordinarily articulate about violation and considerably less articulate about what it means to truly meet another human being once violation has been excluded. Respect, Doyle suggests, is the floor of moral life - indispensable, but a floor is not yet a room, and a room is not yet the full inward reality of a life shared with others.

Across fifteen carefully calibrated sections, the book engages with Iris Murdoch, Simone Weil, Bernard Williams, and Emmanuel Levinas as figures who reached the edge of this territory but did not fully enter it. It develops a working vocabulary - defendedness, presence, unmetness - for naming structural conditions that no inherited moral language has quite captured. It tests its claims against the strongest philosophical objections, including those of contemporary Kantian ethics. And it grounds its philosophical work in three sustained lived passages: a brief encounter with a struggling student, a long friendship that gradually thinned into formality, and the slow decline and death of the writer's grandfather.

The book refuses redemption. It does not offer a method or a practice of presence. What it offers instead is the chance, if the reader is willing, to recognize a pattern earlier than the writer did. Written under a pseudonym to permit honesty about the writer's own failures, this is a work for readers who suspect that ethical correctness alone may leave forms of human loneliness morally unaccounted for, and who wish to see the suspicion examined seriously.

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