Affiliation:
1. University of Belgrade, Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory
Abstract
The main aim of this paper is to put emphasis on the role of trust and the
emotion of being moved in a situation of crisis. I do not intend to address
the general role, or all roles, these emotions might have in a crisis
situation. My focus is rather on the role of these emotions in we-formation,
presupposing that mutual engagement between the actors is the crucial
constituent through which first-person singular shifts to first-person
plural. I rely on Bennet Helm?s argument on how trust can function as an
invitation to delineate communal norms in the new circumstances of
uncertainty. Accordingly, by being trusted by other(s), the addressee is
entitled to the expected responsibility for a situation: (1) the addressee
is entitled as a member of a group (of us who are responsible in the
situation); (2) the addressee is exposed to pressure to respond to a
situation with responsibility. In the second part, I adopt Cova?s and
Deonna?s argument about the function of the emotion of being moved. I
suggest that in such a situation ?being moved? expresses the readiness to
reorganize one?s hierarchy of values in the light of new circumstances of
mutual dependency. Taken together, trust and being moved portray the outline
of mutual engagement between the actors in a crisis situation which aims to
establish new communal norms and values.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy
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