Attending – patient contemplation focused on a particular being – is a central ethical activity that has not been recognized by any of the main moral systems in the European philosophical tradition. That tradition has imagined that the moral agent is primarily a problem solver and world changer when what might be needed most is a witness. Moral theory has been agonized by dualism – motivation is analyzed into beliefs and desires, descriptions of facts and dissatisfactions with them, while action is represented as an effort to lessen dissatisfaction by altering the empirical world. In Attending Warren Heiti traces an alternative genealogy of ethics, drawing from the Platonism recovered by Simone Weil and developed in the work of Iris Murdoch, John McDowell, and Jan Zwicky. According to Weil, virtue is knowledge, knowledge is embodied, and the knower is nested in an ecosystem of relationships. Instead of analyzing and solving theoretical problems, Heiti aims to clarify the terrain by setting up objects of attention from more than one discipline, including not only philosophy but also literature, psychology, film, and visual art. The traditional picture captures one important type of ethical faced with a moral problem, one looks to a general rule to furnish the solution. But not all problems conform to this model. Heiti offers an to see what is needed, one attends to the particular being.
Warren Heiti Boeken
Het werk van Warren Heiti duikt in de complexiteit van proza, met een focus op verteltechnieken en stilistische nuances. Hij onderzoekt kritisch hoe auteurs betekenis en emotionele resonantie construeren, en biedt lezers een diepere waardering voor het schrijversambacht. Zijn analytische, maar toegankelijke benadering verlicht de kern van wat literatuur meeslepend en duurzaam maakt. Door zijn inzichtelijke literaire commentaar onthult Heiti de subtiele kunst die krachtige storytelling definieert.
