Reflections On Jean Amг©ry: Torture, Resentment,... [2025]
: 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
: He sees resentment as a refusal to let the past "settle" or be forgotten by history. Reflections on Jean AmГ©ry: Torture, Resentment,...
Unlike traditional ethics that view resentment as a poison to be purged, Améry champions it as a vital moral stance. : He defines it through the Latin torquere
Jean Améry (1912–1978) was an Austrian-born philosopher and Auschwitz survivor whose work, particularly At the Mind's Limits , provides a haunting analysis of the Holocaust's psychological and moral aftermath. His reflections focus on how extreme trauma destroys an individual's trust in the world and their sense of home. ⛓️ Torture: The Loss of Trust particularly At the Mind's Limits
For Améry, homelessness was both a physical reality (exile) and a spiritual condition.
: He defines it through the Latin torquere (to twist), describing the physical agony of being hung by dislocated arms.
