De paradox van het verlichte gelijkheidsdiscours. Beschouwingen over De uitvinding der mensheid door Siep Stuurman

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    Abstract

    The paradox of Enlightened equality. Some considerations on Siep Stuurman’s De uitvinding van de mensheid Jesus praised the Good Samaritan who, according to the parable, understood that the stranger we encounter in daily life is, in fact, our neighbour. For Siep Stuurman, the tale of the Samaritan symbolizes the fundamental insight that humanity is a universal category transcending cultural differences. It would be perfectly legitimate, however, to interpret Luke 10:25-37 as an ethical injunction to help our neighbour while regarding him or her as inferior to ourselves. Indeed, why should an ethics of compassion based on cultural inequality be morally reprehensible? In De uitvinding van de mensheid (The invention of mankind) Stuurman takes for granted that equality is theoretically more acceptable than inequality. He can do this only by consistently neglecting a powerful inegalitarian train of thought intrinsic to all world religions and cultures and which, in the West, surfaced among others in Plato, Augustine, the Romantics, and conservatism. Stuurman’s take on equality becomes clear when he addresses the contradictory Enlightenment claim that all men are equal but that some (that is, the Enlightened) are more equal than others. He solves the conundrum by treating the claim as an irresolvable ‘duality’. This duality can be borne, he argues, if the Enlightened majority condescends to view society through the eyes of (less Enlightened) minorities. It is more realistic to view the Enlightenment claim not as a duality, but as a paradox. Enlightenment necessarily implies cultural inequality, and in this sense there is no distinction between it and the religions of the Axial Age. Belief in cultural inequality seems to be ingrained in humankind.
    Original languageDutch
    Pages (from-to)98-107
    Number of pages10
    JournalTijdschrift Voor Geschiedenis
    Volume124
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2011

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