If you were to hold me personally responsible for, say, it raining last Friday in Bulgaria, then I would probably laugh in your face — S
But maybe this is confusing the epistemic issue (risk or not knowing the unintended consequences of an action) with the metaphysical issue (whether actions are indeed mechanical or ‘information in, action out’)? — Noah Te Stroete
Probably, but then, if you were to read past my click-baity OP title, you'd know I'd laugh along too. — StreetlightX
you have assumed that we do have responsibility. — thewonder
That the consequences of an action can not be known — thewonder
The question is over what responsibility entails. — StreetlightX
If you were boring and unspecific maybe. — StreetlightX
Eh, not a thread for you I guess. — StreetlightX
Doubtless, Butler and Arendt accounts of responsibility are correct. Nevertheless,Responsibility enters precisely at the point at which our actions exceed us. — StreetlightX
In Arendt's terminology, he was creating works while refusing action. But in this very precise way, where the work simulated action. ... It really does feel like the sphere of 'action' in Arendt's sense is lessening. — csalisbury
I don't quite see how labor conditions under post-Fodist Capital dissolve responsibility. You're actually held to more of a standard. Even a dishwasher has to be some sort of artist. The pressure to perform is inane. Responsibility becomes distorted under post-Fordist Capital so as to be equated with service as an art form. — thewonder
responsible for everything, you are effectively responsible for nothing — StreetlightX
I think again of social media performers - or anyone, really - who get called out for saying the wrong thing by hundreds and thousands of anonymous netizens: how does one respond in a way commensurate to that? — StreetlightX
With respect to responsibility, one can say something similar is occurring: we are held ever more accountable to the form of responsibility without being held accountable for any one thing in particular. With work coinciding with performance and control being ever more absolutized, there is no longer any space of 'non-control' in relation to which responsibility becomes intelligible. Hence a kind of diffusion of responsibility which makes us both absolutely responsible, while at the same time emptying responsibility of any content. — StreetlightX
if ethics has gone to shit, shift the focus to communal world building, to reengineering the conditions under which we could again relate to one another outside juridical categories, whether in a renewed ethical mode, or simply otherwise. These paths don't exhaust the range of responses, but indicate, if I'm not insane, some possible — StreetlightX
My first thought was something that I realized, reflecting, was very gelassenheit-y, and that's no good because we know how well that worked out. — csalisbury
If you're envisioning something different that a restoration (brave new world thing) then this would have be the creation of something new. I know this is nitpicky (and I'm not sure you used the word literally) but wouldn't it have to be less a matter of 'engineering' and more a matter of *cultivating* present (pregnant) conditions for (the realization of) new conditions?
If so, what would that kind of politics consist of? — csalisbury
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