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Definition of Man: What is Left of the Nuremberg Code?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2024

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All of us share the same feeling of being torn between two equally impossible attitudes, namely the absurdity of resistance and the abjectness of renunciation, that is to say a feeling of surrender to the course of events and I think that it is true that we are all more or less filled with this feeling or to revert to other terminology which I will borrow from Jacques Ellul, we all have the feeling of being swept away in a haphazard process over which we no longer have any hold. In this respect, I tend to agree with Alain Caillé, that we are at the moment experiencing a shift, a transformation, a revolution - use whichever term you prefer - such as has only happened two or three times in western history and it is true that this great shift is probably comparable, to the Renaissance, say, or the fall of the Roman Empire or possibly the Enlightenment or even the Industrial Revolution in its extent, radicality and also what is enigmatic about it that for those who are experiencing it. There is a radicality in what we are experiencing which is the source of that feeling which sometimes assails us that all resistance would not only be useless but ridiculous. I intend to deconstruct, if I may so express it, this feeling of ridicule which is paralysing us and which indeed paralyses us all the more because it is exploited day after day by talk of flux in which all desires and all ethical or political voluntarism is in general described as some kind of residual archaism.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © ICPHS 2002

References

Notes

1. Primo Levi, Si c'est un homme (If This is a Man), Paris, Robert Laffont 1996. (See p.258-9 of the Appendix, written in 1976 for an academic edition).

2. Pierre Legendre: amongst others, Dieu au miroir. Etude sur l'institution des Images (God in the mirror. A study of the institution of images), Paris, Fayard 1994.