Shocking Others: a Phenomenology of Emotional Shock and Political Polarization Cover Image

Shocking Others: a Phenomenology of Emotional Shock and Political Polarization
Shocking Others: a Phenomenology of Emotional Shock and Political Polarization

Author(s): Pierrick Simon
Subject(s): Political Philosophy, Crowd Psychology: Mass phenomena and political interactions
Published by: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Marii Curie-Sklodowskiej
Keywords: surprise; shock; disbelief; trauma; otherness; strangeness; indignation; out- rage; phenomenology; polarization; Levinas;

Summary/Abstract: This article uses the phenomenological method to explain the emotion of shock, which is at the heart of political polarization. It answers the following question: what is this often par- adoxical feeling of disbelief that we feel when we find something shocking, and why does it make people strangers to one another? Unlike other existing conceptions of shock (Stockdale, Osler), we employ the phenomenological framework of Lorelle’s “traumatic experience” to make explicit the positive aspect of shock: showing how shock is an experience in itself and not merely a failure to assimilate experience. The conclusion reached is that surprise should not be seen as always a passive acknowledgment of the gap between our expectations and reality; in- stead it should be fully recognized as an active force. Thus, disbelief can be a moral standard that asserts itself and imposes an aura of strangeness on the people we disagree with.

  • Issue Year: 2023
  • Issue No: 36
  • Page Range: 123-139
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: English