Reflections On Jean Amг©ry: Torture, Resentment,... Here
Améry describes torture as the "most terrible event a person can retain within himself".
: Resentment demands that the perpetrator and society acknowledge the crime as if it were still happening, resisting "reconciliation" that favors the guilty.
: He famously noted that "intellect" was useless in the camps; philosophical theories could not provide comfort or protection against the brute reality of the SS. Recommended Reading Reflections on Jean AmГ©ry: Torture, Resentment,...
: Améry explicitly refutes Nietzsche’s view of ressentiment as a sign of weakness, arguing instead that it is the only honest response to radical evil. 🏠 Homelessness: The Exile of the Mind
Unlike traditional ethics that view resentment as a poison to be purged, Améry champions it as a vital moral stance. Améry describes torture as the "most terrible event
: He defines it through the Latin torquere (to twist), describing the physical agony of being hung by dislocated arms.
: At the Mind’s Limits: Contemplations by a Survivor on Auschwitz and Its Realities . : At the Mind’s Limits: Contemplations by a
: Reflections on Jean Améry by Vivaldi Jean-Marie offers a deep dive into these specific themes of torture and homelessness.
