陀思妥耶夫斯基《地下笔记》中的恶魔与心

IF 0.2 4区 哲学 0 RELIGION
Emily Lehman
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The author who would reportedly say \"My hosanna is born of a furnace of doubt\" exorcised his demons in The Brothers Karamazov, as he did in the remainder of the quintet of his most well-known novels.1 But Notes from Underground, written in 1864 after the death of Dostoevsky's wife and brother, is Dostoevsky's rawest account of doubt, and his most sympathetic portrayal of the materialists, determinists, and nihilists upon whom he would cast aspersions in The Idiot. Notes, which would be the gateway to Dostoevsky's five most serious novels, takes the form of a series of disjointed rambles from an unnamed protagonist. In its seemingly chaotic portrayal of the human experience, the novella presents an argument for Christianity that is strong by being counterintuitive. In the philosophical ramblings that constitute the first part of the work, the Underground Man flails against the dictates of late modern [End Page 46] materialism and determinism even while attempting to claim their most important effect for himself—an abdication of responsibility. In the second part of the novella, the story of his encounter with the prostitute Liza, the Underground Man discovers that responsibility never really can be abdicated, only denied. By portraying a man up against the fundamental structure of reality, Dostoevsky makes a powerful, and perhaps his most subtle, presentation of the evidence for divine mercy and human freedom. This honesty would endear Dostoevsky to Friedrich Nietzsche, who called the earlier writer \"the only psychologist from whom I had something to learn.\"2 Nietzsche was profoundly impressed by Notes from Underground. In a letter to Peter Gast dated March 7, 1887, he calls the work \"a real stroke of genius in psychology—a terrible and cruel piece of mockery levelled at γνῶθι σεαυτόν [\"know thyself\"], but done with such a light and daring hand, and with so much of the rapture of superior strength, that I was almost intoxicated with joy.\"3 Dostoevsky shows that \"superior strength\" by making the best case for nihilism that he can—a case that Nietzche would make even more aggressively later on, continuing the takedown of the philosophical and religious framework that had been taken for granted for hundreds of years. Dostoevsky's demons are the demons of Nietzsche, which are the demons of late modernity. Though Dostoevsky did not himself embrace nihilism in the end—and attempted to include in Notes even more of a religious rebuke to nihilism than the censors permitted—in Notes from Underground he allows the reader to see, as Nietzsche would have put it, his own abyss staring back at him.4 This honesty also makes Notes from Underground an appropriate work to put in conversation with that twentieth-century inheritance of Aristotelian ethics, After Virtue. In After Virtue, Alasdair MacIntyre identifies Nietzsche as simply following through on the philosophical tenets of emotivism, making Nietzscheanism one of the two alternatives available to the intellectually consistent late-modern man, \"one of the two genuine theoretical alternatives confronting anyone trying to analyze the moral condition of our culture.\"5 MacIntyre, like [End Page 47] Dostoevsky and Nietzsche, sees the logical conclusions that post-Enlightenment determinism was sometimes unwilling to make. MacIntyre describes Nietzsche's position thus: In five swift, witty and cogent paragraphs he disposes of both what I have called the Enlightenment project to discover rational foundations for an objective morality and of the confidence of the everyday moral agent in post-Enlightenment culture that his moral practice and utterance are in good order. But Nietzsche then goes on to confront the problem that this act of destruction has caused. … if there is nothing to morality but expressions of will, my morality can only be what my...","PeriodicalId":42128,"journal":{"name":"LOGOS-A JOURNAL OF CATHOLIC THOUGHT AND CULTURE","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Demons and the Heart in Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground\",\"authors\":\"Emily Lehman\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/log.2023.a909169\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Demons and the Heart in Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground Emily Lehman (bio) narrative, selfhood, Notes from Underground, Dostoevsky, Christos Yannnaras, relationality Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov is a common—almost clichéd—text for engaging with the problem of theodicy. Perhaps this is because, rather than being a theoretical philosophical exercise, the concerns that Dostoevsky raises in The Brothers Karamazov are concerns with which he himself has deep sympathy—and most readers cannot help but have deep sympathy as well. The author who would reportedly say \\\"My hosanna is born of a furnace of doubt\\\" exorcised his demons in The Brothers Karamazov, as he did in the remainder of the quintet of his most well-known novels.1 But Notes from Underground, written in 1864 after the death of Dostoevsky's wife and brother, is Dostoevsky's rawest account of doubt, and his most sympathetic portrayal of the materialists, determinists, and nihilists upon whom he would cast aspersions in The Idiot. Notes, which would be the gateway to Dostoevsky's five most serious novels, takes the form of a series of disjointed rambles from an unnamed protagonist. In its seemingly chaotic portrayal of the human experience, the novella presents an argument for Christianity that is strong by being counterintuitive. In the philosophical ramblings that constitute the first part of the work, the Underground Man flails against the dictates of late modern [End Page 46] materialism and determinism even while attempting to claim their most important effect for himself—an abdication of responsibility. In the second part of the novella, the story of his encounter with the prostitute Liza, the Underground Man discovers that responsibility never really can be abdicated, only denied. By portraying a man up against the fundamental structure of reality, Dostoevsky makes a powerful, and perhaps his most subtle, presentation of the evidence for divine mercy and human freedom. 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Though Dostoevsky did not himself embrace nihilism in the end—and attempted to include in Notes even more of a religious rebuke to nihilism than the censors permitted—in Notes from Underground he allows the reader to see, as Nietzsche would have put it, his own abyss staring back at him.4 This honesty also makes Notes from Underground an appropriate work to put in conversation with that twentieth-century inheritance of Aristotelian ethics, After Virtue. In After Virtue, Alasdair MacIntyre identifies Nietzsche as simply following through on the philosophical tenets of emotivism, making Nietzscheanism one of the two alternatives available to the intellectually consistent late-modern man, \\\"one of the two genuine theoretical alternatives confronting anyone trying to analyze the moral condition of our culture.\\\"5 MacIntyre, like [End Page 47] Dostoevsky and Nietzsche, sees the logical conclusions that post-Enlightenment determinism was sometimes unwilling to make. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

艾米丽·雷曼(传记)叙事,自我,《地下笔记》,陀思妥耶夫斯基,克里斯托斯·扬纳拉斯,关系陀思妥耶夫斯基的《卡拉马佐夫兄弟》是一篇常见的,几乎是陈词滥调的关于神正论问题的文章。也许这是因为,陀思妥耶夫斯基在《卡拉马佐夫兄弟》中提出的问题,与其说是一种理论哲学练习,不如说是他本人深切同情的问题——大多数读者也情不自禁地深切同情。这位据说会说“我的和散那诞生于怀疑的熔炉”的作者在《卡拉马佐夫兄弟》中驱除了他心中的恶魔,就像他在他最著名的五重奏的其余部分中所做的那样但是《地下笔记》,写于1864年陀思妥耶夫斯基的妻子和兄弟去世后,是陀思妥耶夫斯基对怀疑的最原始的描述,也是他对唯物主义者、决定主义者和虚无主义者的最同情的描绘,他在《白痴》中对这些人进行了恶意的攻击。《笔记》是陀思妥耶夫斯基最严肃的五部小说的开端,它采用了一个无名主人公一系列不连贯的漫谈的形式。在对人类经历看似混乱的描绘中,这部中篇小说提出了一种反对直觉的基督教论点。在构成作品第一部分的哲学漫谈中,地下人对现代晚期唯物主义和决定论的支配进行了抨击,尽管他试图宣称它们对自己最重要的影响——放弃责任。在中篇小说的第二部分,他遇到妓女丽莎的故事中,地下人发现责任永远不能真正被放弃,只能被否认。陀思妥耶夫斯基通过描绘一个与现实的基本结构相对抗的人,有力地,也许是他最微妙的,展示了神的仁慈和人类自由的证据。这种诚实使陀思妥耶夫斯基受到弗里德里希·尼采(Friedrich Nietzsche)的喜爱,尼采称这位早期作家是“我唯一可以向他学习的心理学家”。《地下笔记》给尼采留下了深刻的印象。在1887年3月7日写给彼得·加斯特的信中,他称这项工作是“心理学上的一次真正的天才之举——是对γν ν θι σεα ν ν τ ν ν(“认识你自己”)的一次可怕而残酷的嘲弄,但它是用如此轻快而大胆的手完成的,而且是用如此多的优势力量所带来的狂喜,以至于我几乎欣喜若狂。”陀思妥耶夫斯基通过尽其所能地为虚无主义做最好的论证,展示了这种“卓越的力量”——尼采后来更积极地论证了这一点,继续推翻数百年来被视为理所当然的哲学和宗教框架。陀思妥耶夫斯基的恶魔是尼采的恶魔,是晚期现代性的恶魔。虽然陀思妥耶夫斯基本人最终并没有拥抱虚无主义——他试图在《笔记》中包含比审查员允许的更多的对虚无主义的宗教谴责——但在《地下笔记》中,他让读者看到,正如尼采所说,他自己的深渊正盯着他这种诚实也使《地下笔记》成为与二十世纪继承的亚里士多德伦理学《美德之后》进行对话的合适作品。在《美德之后》一书中,Alasdair MacIntyre认为尼采只是遵循了情感主义的哲学原则,使尼采主义成为智性一致的晚期现代人可以选择的两种选择之一,“这是任何试图分析我们文化道德状况的人所面临的两种真正的理论选择之一。”麦金太尔,像陀思妥耶夫斯基和尼采一样,看到了后启蒙运动决定论有时不愿做出的逻辑结论。麦金太尔这样描述尼采的立场:在五个快速,机智和有力的段落中,他处理了我所说的启蒙工程,发现客观道德的理性基础,以及后启蒙文化中日常道德行为者的信心,他的道德实践和话语是有序的。但是尼采接着面对了这个破坏行为所造成的问题。如果道德只是意志的表达,那么我的道德就只能是我的……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Demons and the Heart in Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground
Demons and the Heart in Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground Emily Lehman (bio) narrative, selfhood, Notes from Underground, Dostoevsky, Christos Yannnaras, relationality Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov is a common—almost clichéd—text for engaging with the problem of theodicy. Perhaps this is because, rather than being a theoretical philosophical exercise, the concerns that Dostoevsky raises in The Brothers Karamazov are concerns with which he himself has deep sympathy—and most readers cannot help but have deep sympathy as well. The author who would reportedly say "My hosanna is born of a furnace of doubt" exorcised his demons in The Brothers Karamazov, as he did in the remainder of the quintet of his most well-known novels.1 But Notes from Underground, written in 1864 after the death of Dostoevsky's wife and brother, is Dostoevsky's rawest account of doubt, and his most sympathetic portrayal of the materialists, determinists, and nihilists upon whom he would cast aspersions in The Idiot. Notes, which would be the gateway to Dostoevsky's five most serious novels, takes the form of a series of disjointed rambles from an unnamed protagonist. In its seemingly chaotic portrayal of the human experience, the novella presents an argument for Christianity that is strong by being counterintuitive. In the philosophical ramblings that constitute the first part of the work, the Underground Man flails against the dictates of late modern [End Page 46] materialism and determinism even while attempting to claim their most important effect for himself—an abdication of responsibility. In the second part of the novella, the story of his encounter with the prostitute Liza, the Underground Man discovers that responsibility never really can be abdicated, only denied. By portraying a man up against the fundamental structure of reality, Dostoevsky makes a powerful, and perhaps his most subtle, presentation of the evidence for divine mercy and human freedom. This honesty would endear Dostoevsky to Friedrich Nietzsche, who called the earlier writer "the only psychologist from whom I had something to learn."2 Nietzsche was profoundly impressed by Notes from Underground. In a letter to Peter Gast dated March 7, 1887, he calls the work "a real stroke of genius in psychology—a terrible and cruel piece of mockery levelled at γνῶθι σεαυτόν ["know thyself"], but done with such a light and daring hand, and with so much of the rapture of superior strength, that I was almost intoxicated with joy."3 Dostoevsky shows that "superior strength" by making the best case for nihilism that he can—a case that Nietzche would make even more aggressively later on, continuing the takedown of the philosophical and religious framework that had been taken for granted for hundreds of years. Dostoevsky's demons are the demons of Nietzsche, which are the demons of late modernity. Though Dostoevsky did not himself embrace nihilism in the end—and attempted to include in Notes even more of a religious rebuke to nihilism than the censors permitted—in Notes from Underground he allows the reader to see, as Nietzsche would have put it, his own abyss staring back at him.4 This honesty also makes Notes from Underground an appropriate work to put in conversation with that twentieth-century inheritance of Aristotelian ethics, After Virtue. In After Virtue, Alasdair MacIntyre identifies Nietzsche as simply following through on the philosophical tenets of emotivism, making Nietzscheanism one of the two alternatives available to the intellectually consistent late-modern man, "one of the two genuine theoretical alternatives confronting anyone trying to analyze the moral condition of our culture."5 MacIntyre, like [End Page 47] Dostoevsky and Nietzsche, sees the logical conclusions that post-Enlightenment determinism was sometimes unwilling to make. MacIntyre describes Nietzsche's position thus: In five swift, witty and cogent paragraphs he disposes of both what I have called the Enlightenment project to discover rational foundations for an objective morality and of the confidence of the everyday moral agent in post-Enlightenment culture that his moral practice and utterance are in good order. But Nietzsche then goes on to confront the problem that this act of destruction has caused. … if there is nothing to morality but expressions of will, my morality can only be what my...
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
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期刊介绍: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture is an interdisciplinary quarterly committed to exploring the beauty, truth, and vitality of Christianity, particularly as it is rooted in and shaped by Catholicism. We seek a readership that extends beyond the academy, and publish articles on literature, philosophy, theology, history, the natural and social sciences, art, music, public policy, and the professions. Logos is published under the auspices of the Center for Catholic Studies at the University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minnesota.
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