Die Ökologie der Person – Kantische Motive des Personbegriffs in Karol Wojtyłas “Person und Tat”

Miniatura

Data

2012

Tytuł czasopisma

ISSN czasopisma

Tytuł tomu

Wydawca

The Pontifical University of John Paul II in Cracow

Abstrakt

Apart from many legitimate concerns about ecology, the most important contemporary concern should be of anthropological nature and must address the human as a person (Benedikt XVI). What is man? Are human beings free? What should human beings do? These Kantian questions also describe the main starting points of Karol Wojtyła’s philosophy in “The Acting Person”. With regard to the importance of the question (ecology of man) our challenge is divided into three parts. Firstly, man is a person; secondly, his call is to liberty and lastly, responsible love is an emanation of personal dignity. In this manner the three important points in Wojtyła’s philosophy (person, liberty, love) are well characterized. The essence of man is his personal dignity as a source for the possibility of free (responsible) decisions – “the act”. The experience of morality is included in the experience of being a person. Wojtyła poses the question “how do I understand who I am throughout my acts?” Like Kant, the author emphasizes the importance of free will, conscientiousness as an obligation, which speaks to the conscious person. I determine myself through my own decision (person’s actions). For Wojtyła, participation in love is the basis of all human personal experiences. “Only persons participate in love”. Participation in the character of the other becomes – in the language of Wojtyła – “the choice of the other person in myself”.

Opis

Artykuł w języku niemieckim.

Słowa kluczowe

ekologia osoby, Karol Wojtyła, kapłani, duchowieństwo, osoba, czyn, wola, świadomość, Immanuel Kant, filozofia, ecology of person, clergy, priesthood, person, act, will, consciousness, philosophy, Ökologie der Person, Person, Tat, Philosophie

Cytowanie

The Person and the Challenges, 2012, Vol. 2, No. 2, p. 61-82.

Licencja

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Poland