As I was preparing another essay β an essay on the rhetoric of evil β I had a thought about the relative intersubjectivity of subjectivity.
If one takes subjectivity seriously β not the Hollywood version with self-made heroes, but the real creature stitched together from language, history, and whatever emotional debris it stepped in on the way to adulthood β then one ends up somewhere awkward: the relative intersubjectivity of subjectivity.
Which is to say, weβre all standing on conceptual scaffolding built by other people, insisting itβs solid marble. A charming fiction, until we apply it to anything with moral voltage. ‘Evil’, for instance, collapses the moment you remove the demonological life-support and notice itβs little more than a childβs intensifier strapped to a cultural power tool.
More on that later. For now, just sit with the discomfort that the ‘self’ making moral judgments is already a negotiated artefact β relational, compromised, and never as autonomous as it pretends.