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Published in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 2/2019

Open Access 01-06-2019 | Scientific Contribution

Me? The invisible call of responsibility and its promise for care ethics: a phenomenological view

Authors: Inge van Nistelrooij, Merel Visse

Published in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy | Issue 2/2019

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Abstract

Care ethics emphasizes responsibility as a key element for caring practices. Responsibilities to care are taken by certain groups of people, making caring practices into moral and political practices in which responsibilities are assigned, assumed, or implicitly expected, as well as deflected. Despite this attention for social practices of distribution and its unequal result, making certain groups of people the recipient of more caring responsibilities than others, the passive aspect of a caring responsibility has been underexposed by care ethics. By drawing upon the work of the French phenomenologist Jean-Luc Marion, a care ethical conceptualization of responsibility can by enriched, by scrutinizing how responsibility is literally a response to something else. This paper starts with a vignette of an everyday situation of professional care. After that the current body of care ethical literature on responsibility is presented, followed by Marion’s phenomenology of givenness, using his analysis of Caravaggio’s painting The Calling of St. Matthew and resulting in his redefinition of responsibility. In the next section we present a table in which we juxtapose four distinct paradigms of responsibility, which we will describe briefly. The final section consists of an exploration of the paradigms by an analysis of the vignette and results in a conclusion concerning what Marion’s view has to offer to care ethics with regard to responsibility.
Footnotes
1
For this analysis we draw upon Van Nistelrooij (2015).
 
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Metadata
Title
Me? The invisible call of responsibility and its promise for care ethics: a phenomenological view
Authors
Inge van Nistelrooij
Merel Visse
Publication date
01-06-2019
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy / Issue 2/2019
Print ISSN: 1386-7423
Electronic ISSN: 1572-8633
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11019-018-9873-7

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