In the wake of the pandemic, we are witnessing the growing prevalence of aggression and emotionality in social and political life. We find ourselves living in an increasingly impatient and insecure society, which is sceptical of scientific thought and which takes refuge in the irrational. The decline of rationality and the growing prevalence of violence are increasingly common features of a society that has lost touch with the great Enlightenment narrative. We need, argues Bordoni, to rediscover the rationality we have lost and recuperate the positive side of technology.
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Mari Fitzduff, Brandeis University
"Bordoni's search for an understanding of the paradox of ethical violence - and of many other puzzles of human rationality and irrationality - takes him through many times and places of human history, a wealth of philosophers and others from the ancient Greeks to today's writers, and a myriad of ideas. This is a book that makes you stop and think after nearly every sentence."
Colin Crouch, University of Warwick
"Ethical Violence is a timely book, a theoretical vade mecum for dark times, simultaneously ambitious and cautious, taking the reader on unusual paths from ancient philosophers to contemporary social scientists, questioning what is taken for granted about the distinction between rationality and irrationality. A needed reflection on the crisis of late modernity."
Didier Fassin, Collège de France and Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton