The Question of Resentment in Nietzsche and Confucian Ethics
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Title
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The Question of Resentment in Nietzsche and Confucian Ethics
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Author
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Eric S. NELSON
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Page
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17-51
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DOI
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10.6163/tjeas.2013.10(1)17
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Abstract
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I examine in this paper the experience of "resentment" in Chinese and
European ethical thinking, particularly in early Confucian ethics and in
Nietzsche's genealogy of ressentiment. Self-cultivation is articulated in the
Analects in light of issues of recognition and resentment. In contrast to European
discourses of recognition and resentment, the compilers of the Analects
recognized the pervasiveness of resentment under certain social conditions and
the ethical demand to counter it both within oneself and in relation to others. In
early Confucian ethics, resentment is understood in a variety of senses.
Overcoming resentment in oneself and in others is a primary element of
becoming a genuinely exemplary or noble person in the ethical sense; the ignoble
person by contrast is fixated on his or her own limited and self-interested
concerns. Whereas contemporary Western ethical theory typically assumes that
symmetry and equality are the primary means of overcoming resentment, I
examine how the asymmetrical recognition of the priority of the other appears
necessary for overcoming resentment in the Analects. Early Confucian ethics
integrates a nuanced and realistic moral psychology of resentment and the ethical
self-cultivation necessary for dismantling it in promoting a condition of humane
benevolence. Benevolence is oriented toward others even as it is achieved in the
care of the self and self-cultivation.
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Keyword
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Emotions, Ethics, Resentment, Self-Cultivation, Confucius, Nietzsche
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