Repository | Book | Chapter

200877

(2018) Walker Percy, philosopher, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

On being jaded

Walker Percy's philosophical contributions

Nathan P. Carson

pp. 215-250

Familiarity, so the saying goes, breeds contempt. But, why should familiarity breed such a negative thing as contempt, or other negative orientations? Walker Percy, it would seem, has a lot to say about human jadedness, sometimes through the very means by which we are meant to inhabit ontological intimacy. One may (justifiably) not care much about, say sparrows, but intuitively people seem jaded about something that matters (or once mattered) to them in a deeper way. This chapter explores the personal or social sources of jadedness: is it an individual problem only, or caused by broader cultural factors? I attempt to sketch an initial theory of jadedness, and then expand that theory by attending to Percy's unique philosophical contributions. I will argue, that there are at least two types of jadedness—a narrow, domain-specific psychological type and a global, existential type—that share structural similarities such as volitional and epistemic inertia, an unsettled loss of meaning, a faulty assumption of epistemic completion or superiority, and a foreclosure of ontological possibilities. I then show how Percy uniquely integrates these two types of jadedness within a broader framework of what it means to be human

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-77968-3_11

Full citation:

Carson, N. P. (2018)., On being jaded: Walker Percy's philosophical contributions, in L. Marsh (ed.), Walker Percy, philosopher, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 215-250.

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.