Repository | Series | Buch | Kapitel
Reservations on hospitality
contact and vulnerability in Kant and indigenous action
pp. 197-221
Abstrakt
Just as in war and politics there is no definitive victory, but only a relative and precarious superiority or equilibrium, so in the order of life there are no successes that radically devalorize other attempts and make them appear failed. All successes are threatened, since individuals and even species die. Successes are delayed failures; failures are aborted successes.1
Publication details
Published in:
Baker Gideon (2013) Hospitality and world politics. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Seiten: 197-221
Referenz:
Casas Klausen Jimmy (2013) „Reservations on hospitality: contact and vulnerability in Kant and indigenous action“, In: Baker (ed.), Hospitality and world politics, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 197–221.