Ricoeur's askēsis

textual and gymnastic exercises for self-transformation

Brian Gregor

pp. 421-438

This essay examines what the philosophy of Paul Ricoeur can contribute to current debates on the role of spiritual exercise, or askēsis, in philosophical life. The influential work of Pierre Hadot and Michel Foucault has sparked a widespread interest in the ancient model of philosophy, variously described as a way of life, art of living, or care of the self. Ricoeur's potential contribution to this conversation has been overlooked, largely because he does not discuss these themes explicitly or often. However, Ricoeur's early phenomenology of embodiment in The Voluntary and the Involuntary offers valuable insights regarding the exercises of self-transformation. After a brief survey of Ricoeur's concept of askēsis, this essay draws on Ricoeur to demonstrate the merits of physical exercise, or gymnastic, in ethical and spiritual formation. Gymnastic, Ricoeur shows, can be a form of spiritual exercise. The final section of the paper then makes a similarly counterintuitive claim: namely, that reading is an embodied practice that can facilitate the ethical formation of the lived body.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11007-017-9424-6

Full citation:

Gregor, B. (2018). Ricoeur's askēsis: textual and gymnastic exercises for self-transformation. Continental Philosophy Review 51 (3), pp. 421-438.

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