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Self-Deception and Autobiography: Theological and Ethical Reflections on Speer's "Inside the Third Reich"
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1974
Year
Neutral LabelExistentialismFirst-person NarrativeContemporary FictionPersistent FailureArchitecture CriticismNarrative And IdentityPhilosophy Of HistoryPhilosophical InquiryIrrationalityCritical TheoryAlbert SpeerLanguage StudiesThird ReichBiblical StudyEthical ReflectionsIntellectual HistoryLife Writing
Albert Speer's life offers a paradigm of self-deception, and his autobiography serves to illustrate Fingarette's account of self-deception as a persistent failure to spell out our engagements in the world. Using both Speer and Fingarette, we show how self-deception becomes our lot as the stories we adopt to shape our lives cover up what is destructive in our activity. Had Speer not settled for the neutral label of architect, he might have found a story substantive enough to allow him to recognize the implications of his engagements with Hitler's Reich. This side of Auschwitz we require a story which allows us to appropriate our own capacities for evil and yet empowers us to go on.
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