تأملات اخلاقی (Dec 2020)

PLACE: PRESENCE AS SECOND-PERSONAL SPACE

  • Stephen Darwall

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 4
pp. 7 – 16

Abstract

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The concept of place is ultimately a matter of ethical significance—of where something fits in a nexus or structure of meaning. Often this meaning is quite personal, involving a sense of presence we associate with a place. This essay investigates this connection through a study of Wordsworth’s poem, “Tintern Abbey.” It argues that the notion of a presence-infused place is ultimately that of a second-personal space. Presence is a matter of second-personal openness. Therefore, when presence infuses place, it makes its space second-personal also.

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