Ruwen Ogien

Ruwen Ogien is a contemporary French philosopher. He is a researcher (directeur de recherche) at the French National Centre for Scientific Research. His work focuses on moral philosophy and the philosophy of social science. He is the brother of Albert Ogien sociologist.

He was educated in Brussels, Tel Aviv, University of Cambridge, Paris, Columbia University and Montreal.[1]

Trained in social anthropology, he has written extensively on poverty and immigration. His thesis in philosophy, under the direction of Jacques Bouveresse was published under the title The Weakness of the Will. His current areas of research are moral philosophy and the philosophy of social sciences. He is also interested in the philosophy of action, the notion of practical reason as well as practical irrationality. His other work has focused on the question of emotions, including hatred and shame.

He is currently working to develop an ethical theory he calls "minimal ethics." This is an ethical anti-paternalistic theory which would give reason to minimize the areas of intervention of what he calls, following John Stuart Mill, the "moral police". Minimal ethics arose initially in the form of three principles:

Subsequently, Ogien tried to reduce it to one: "Do not harm others, nothing more" following this reasoning:

Finally, what Ogien called "minimal ethics" is an ethic that excludes moral duties to oneself and positive paternalistic duties towards others. It tends to be reduced to one principle of not harming others. In accordance with this general conception of ethics, it supports the freedom to do what one wants from his own life as long as we do not harm others, which implies that the decriminalization of drug use, all forms of sexual relations between consenting adults, and active assistance to die for those who make the request. A special issue of the "Journal of Theology and Philosophy" was devoted to minimal ethics.

Ogien tried to relate ethics with similarly 'minimal' work on the moral development of children and the variability of moral systems in a book published in September 2011: The influence of the smell of croissants on human kindness and other matters of experimental moral philosophy.

Publications

Notes and references

  1. Ruwen Ogien : " Ne pas nuire aux autres, rien de plus " par Roger-Pol Droit, Le Monde, mis en ligne le 16 juillet 2009.
  2. Ogien, Ruwen, La panique morale, Paris, Grasset, 2004, p. 30.
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