The Ghosts of Justice

Heidegger, Derrida and the Fate of Deconstruction

by Ashok Kara


Formats

Softcover
$37.95
Softcover
$37.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 3/2/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 448
ISBN : 9780595170579

About the Book

It is not possible to read Heidegger's text without the image of his arm raised in the Nazi salute haunting it. The image compels us to examine Heidegger's philosophy in terms of its susceptibility to Nazi ideology. Heidegger's philosophy was inscribed at the end of the history of philosophy, a time when Nazism was on the rise and on its way to the renewal of German destiny. In paragraph six of Being and Time Heidegger outlined his agenda for the renewal of philosophy. The renewal necessitated the destruction of the errant history of ontology in order to retrieve the pure primordial experiences. The parallels between the forms of two agendas are coincidental. However, my work shows where they overlapped. I explore the consequence of this overlap by soliciting the 'first' text of philosophy, The Anaximander Fragment, that speaks about justice and injustice.

Justice is also at issue in the text of Jacques Derrida. Derrida's primary resource is paragraph six of Heidegger's Being and Time, a fact that caused some of his readers to assimilate him to Heidegger. Derrida has tried to distance himself from Heidegger and in a late text he has offered us the prescriptive phrase, "Deconstruction is justice," to guide our reading of his text. The phrase invites us to examine Derrida's work in light of its saying. This is what I try to do. I show that a separation cannot be accomplished without a price, because whether an author intends it or not, justice is something ghostly and it keeps its own account. Heidegger's arm and Derrida's hand caught in the trap of paragraph six tell another story, different from the stories the authors tell. The limbs tell the story about the ghosts of justice.


About the Author

Ashok Kara is a practicing clinical psychologist in Memphis, Tn. He received his Ph.D.from the University of Tennessee in 1976. He became interested in Heidegger and Derrida in the 1990's and studied philosophy by auditing classes at the Univeristy of Memphis. This is his first book.