Joseph Sverker

Human Being and Vulnerability


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The divine and the human

       The triune Creator and the anthropological significance of Christ

       Embodied human persons

       “spirit,” sin and the question of ethics

       Chapter 4: Going beyond: relationality, evolutionary theory and time

       Establishing a weak ontology of relationality

       Re-reading the theory of evolution

       Evolution as performativity

       Time matters

       The reality of body

       Chapter 5: Kenotic personalism

       Primacy of “person”?

       Kenosis, vulnerability and persons: the significance of self-giving relations

       Relation, mediation, interpellation

       Called in time

       The Gift of Vulnerability

       The giving between persons

       Kenosis and feminism

       Kenosis and resistance

       The gift of freedom

       The most vulnerable?

       Conclusion: persons, individuals and institutions

       AI: artificial individualism?

       Disclosing the nature/nurture problem

       Back to school

       Individualism and personalism in school

       A love supreme?

       Bibliography

       In memory of Kristina Sverker

      [O]ur social personality is created by the thoughts of other people. […] We pack the physical outline of the creature we see with all the ideas we have already formed about him, and in the complete picture of him which we compose in our minds those ideas have certainly the principal place. In the end they come to fill so completely the curve of his cheeks, to follow so exactly the line of his nose, they blend so harmoniously in the sound of his voice that these seem to be no more than a transparent envelope, so that each time we see the face or hear the voice it is our own ideas of him which we recognise and to which we listen.

      - Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way

      The human being is between many things. Life takes place between birth and death, between the home and the political, between who I am and who I want to be, or, perhaps, as for Marcel Proust, between you and the idea of you. For some, the human being is also between God and creation. But the “between” that will be explored in this volume is that of biology on the one hand, and the social on the other. This particular “between” appears difficult to maintain in our contemporary society for one is often privileged over the other. There seems no easy way to reconcile the two.

      I intend to constructively engage this divide between biology and the social by conversing with critical theorist Judith Butler and psycholinguist Steven Pinker. With these two divergent perspectives, another seemingly conflicting account will be brought to the table, that of Colin Gunton’s theological anthropology.

      Why three such different thinkers? While it should be acknowledged that most theorists working on this question do reject simplistic binaries, much contemporary thought still maintains a dichotomy between the biological and the social. I hope that this study will shed some light as to why this division is so prominent in our society, not least in the school context. I have also chosen these thinkers because their different theories, when brought together in conversation, can inform a view of the human being in which the distinction between the biological and the social is less polarized.

      Teachers’ engagement with pupils is a pervasive feature of school, as it should be. And in their interaction with pupils, teachers conceptualize the pupils throughout the day. But in this conceptualization of and engagement with the pupil there is an underlying anthropology, a theory of the human being, that is rarely expressed or made explicit. When I contemplated this as a teacher in Sweden, I realized that the implicit anthropology underlying professional discussions in school was incoherent.