Knud Ejler Løgstrup (1905–1981) was professor of ethics and philosophy of religion at the University of Aarhus until his retirement in 1975. He is the author of numerous books in Danish. English translations of central texts from other ethical works by Løgstrup are available in Beyond the Ethical Demand (University of Notre Dame Press, 2007).
Hans Fink is professor emeritus of philosophy at Aarhus University.
Alasdair MacIntyre is research professor of philosophy at the
University of Notre Dame. He is the author of numerous books,
including Whose Justice? Which Rationality? (Notre Dame Press,
1988) and Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry:
Encyclopaedia, Genealogy, and Tradition (Notre Dame Press,
1990).
“Løgstrup's The Ethical Demand is a challenging and valuable
addition to the growing ethical literature meeting the desperate
needs of our own time. The book is a particularly valuable addition
because of its attempt to meet the difficulties implicit in the
Kantian and Kierkegaardian moral traditions which have been so
influential in Europe in the past one hundred years." —The Canadian
Catholic Review
“[T]his book presents an interesting new way of looking at ethics,
and its account of the various ways we rationalize our failures to
live up to the demand had me examining how far I fell short. It
would prove interesting to compare it to accounts of
‘particularist’ ethics, and of the ethics of care.” —Comptes rendus
philosophiques (Philosophy in Review)
“This is highly original and rewarding, if difficult, treatise on
moral philosophy. Løgstrup, in the same general tradition as Kant
whom he criticizes severely, gives a philosophical account of the
commandment to love the neighbor as the basis of ethics. Løgstrup's
version of the moral imperative, or ‘ethical demand,’ is
ontological: it is the silent, radical, one-sided, impossible,
unarticulated, and anonymous demand that ‘we take care of the life
which trust has placed into our hands.’ . . . A revised and
expanded version, with a helpful introduction, of a 1971 edition,
this edition includes both the final chapter, a polemic against
Kierkegaard’s Works of Love, and an article attacking teleology and
deontology. The critique of Kierkegaard is particularly incisive. .
. .” —Religious Studies Review
“. . . The volume is a useful introduction to the work of a very
insightful heart and mind. Indeed, The Ethical Demand is one of
those rare books that can inspire readers to moral virtue. . . .
English readers are in the considerable debt of Fink, MacIntyre,
Hauerwas, and Notre Dame Press for making Løgstrup's magisterial
work again available in translation. It is an exercise in
attention, a schooling of empathy, that deserves to be much more
widely read and responded to.” —Modern Theology
“This collection of essays by the late Danish philosopher and
theologian Løgstrup presents his theory of using phenomenology in
understanding our ethical decisions. According to Løgstrup,
phenomenology not only provides an understanding of human existence
but also of ethics, through examination of phenomena of ethical
concepts. . . . Løgstrup combines detailed writing with an
excellent critique of competing ethical theories to explain his own
ethical theory, which stresses the moral experience over ethical
principals. These essays will be valuable to scholars and students
in philosophy and ethics.” —Library Journal
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