Honor, History, and Relationship:
Essays in Second-Personal Ethics II
by Stephen
Darwall (Author)
In Honor, History, and Relationship Stephen Darwall
explores the idea of a second-personal framework for morality and its
foundations, in which we are committed to morality by presuppositions that are
inescapable when we relate to others (person to person). He expands on the
argument set forth in The Second-Person Standpoint to explore the second-personal
framework in three further settings. The first concerns a fundamental
difference between the form that respect and the concept of person take in
honor cultures, on the one hand, and the shape these assume in morality
conceived as equal accountability, on the other. One essay explores this
difference directly while others investigate related themes of justice versus
retaliation and vengeance for insult and injury to honor, including in the
writings of Adam Smith and Nietzsche on ressentiment. A second setting concerns
the role of second-personal ideas in the development of a distinctively
"modern" moral philosophy, beginning in seventeenth-century Europe.
Two essays here discuss the centrality of second-personal notions in two
formative modern natural law theorists: Grotius and Pufendorf. And two others
concentrate on the role of reciprocal recognition in Kant and Fichte,
respectively. A third group of essays treat the second-personal structure of
interpersonal relations. There are three essays in this group: one on promising
as a second-personal transaction between promiser and promisee, a second on
what it is to be with another person, and a third on the role of
second-personal standing in personal relationships.