1st Edition

Simone Weil: Basic Writings

Edited By D. K. Levy, Simone Weil, Marina Barabas Copyright 2024
454 Pages
by Routledge

454 Pages
by Routledge

454 Pages
by Routledge

Simone Weil is one of the most profound and thought-provoking thinkers of the 20th century. A teacher, factory and farm labourer, a political activist at home and abroad, a loving friend, daughter and sister—all these manifest a life devoted to the good in its many forms. Her writings explore the good open to us and the various routes to it, spanning philosophy, politics, science and... Read more

Introduction D. K. Levy

Notes on the Translation D. K. Levy and Marina Barabas

Part 1: Here below

Introduction to Part 1 D. K. Levy

1. Study for a declaration of obligations to the human being

2. Concerning syndicalism "Single, Apolitical, Mandatory"

3. Let's not start the Trojan War again

4. Legitimacy of the provisional government

5. What does the Occitanian inspiration consist in

6. Prelude to a declaration of duties toward the human being

7. Is there a Marxist doctrine?

8. Reflections on quantum theory

9. Morality and literature

10. Essay on the concept of reading

11. Some reflexions on the concept of value

12. This war is a war of religions

13. Are we fighting for justice?

14. Is the human person sacred?

Part 2: Mediation

Introduction to Part 2 D. K. Levy

15. Precondition of non-servile work

16. Reflections on the good use of school studies with a view to the love of God

17. Sketch of the "Commentary on Pythagorean texts"

18. Concerning the Pythagorean Doctrine

Part 3: Beyond the sky

Introduction to Part 3 D. K. Levy

19. Theory of Sacraments

20. Forms of the implicit love of God

i. Love of one’s neighbour

ii. Love of the order of the world

iii. Love of religious practices

iv. Friendship

v. Implicit love and explicit love

21. God's love and affliction.

Index

Biography

Simone Weil (1909–1943), a profound, original and influential thinker in the 20th century, was a political writer and activist, and a formidable philosopher. Her best-known writings appeared in English in The Need for Roots (1952), Waiting on God (1951) and Oppression and Liberty (1958). Albert Camus saw her as "the only great spirit of our times".

D.K. Levy is a Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, UK.

Marina Barabas, having taught philosophy in London and Boston, is now a Fellow of the Czech Academy of Sciences.

'Suffering through years of misrepresentation, Simone Weil finally receives the careful editing and philosophical translation she deserves. David Levy and Marina Barabas have crafted the ideal entry point for those looking to engage with Weil’s ideas in English.' - Nicolas Bommarito, Simon Fraser University, Canada

'In her meditations on justice and violence, hope and despair, greatness and humility, the natural and the unnatural, and power and human helplessness, Simone Weil has given us a philosophy for all times, but one that is especially timely in our present crises. For this thoughtfully chosen selection from her work, and their careful and learned commentary on it, Levy and Barabas deserve the gratitude of us all.' - Sophie Grace Chappell, Open University, UK

'These fresh translations do justice to Weil’s prose, a window aspiring to transparency like Weil’s life itself. Attention, too, is focused on the rigor of Weil’s thinking, rooted in the ideal world of Plato and mathematics, while never abandoning the "real world" and the need for a universal justice to uncover its beauty. If the beauty of mathematical science did not reflect the beauty of the world "the real world would be like an ugly body in beautiful clothing", wrote the great logician Kurt Gödel. As this collection demonstrates, Weil would have agreed.' - Palle Yourgrau, Brandeis University, USA