Raimond Gaita's Nun and Unconditional Love

Authors

  • Christopher Cordner University of Melbourne

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15845/nwr.si2026.3758

Keywords:

transforming encounter, , absolute value, witness

Abstract

Raimond Gaita’s witness of a nun engaging with patients in the psychiatric hospital where he worked as a student indelibly marked both his life and his philosophising. What he witnessed helped shape for him a conception of “absolute” value, linked to the power of love, which has animated nearly everything he has written in moral philosophy. Much in this conception I find compelling. But I also find some of the ways Gaita has undertaken to articulate the significance of his witness of the nun elusive and/or puzzling. In a spirit of critical collaboration, I revisit some of what Gaita says on that score. By slightly shifting the light at various points, I hope to let some aspects of the scene Gaita depicts show themselves a little differently. At the end I touch briefly on a difference that taking Gaita seriously arguably makes to the way one does moral philosophy.

Author Biography

Christopher Cordner, University of Melbourne

Associate Professor of Philosophy

School of Historical and Philosophical Studies

References

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Published

2026-02-02

How to Cite

Cordner, C. (2026). Raimond Gaita’s Nun and Unconditional Love. Nordic Wittgenstein Review, (Special Issue 2026). https://doi.org/10.15845/nwr.si2026.3758