Tolerance.ca
Director / Editor: Victor Teboul, Ph.D.
Looking inside ourselves and out at the world
Independent and neutral with regard to all political and religious orientations, Tolerance.ca® aims to promote awareness of the major democratic principles on which tolerance is based.

L'humain, selon Peter Wessel Zapffe, philosophe norvégien, serait une tragédie biologique, une anomalie de l'antinature, une catastrophe existentielle

(French version only)
By
Professor, Law Faculty, Université Laval, Québec, Member of Tolerance.ca®

Une ombre plane sur la pensée contemporaine : celle d'une récusation radicale de l'existence. Peut-on — et doit-on — transformer le berceau en cercueil de l'humanité ? Sous le terme d'antinatalisme se déploie une métaphysique du refus qui ne se contente plus d'interroger la condition humaine, mais en révoque la légitimité même. Cette hostilité envers le vivant, cette volonté de tarir la source de l'être, trouve son architecte le plus implacable dans le Grand Nord, chez le philosophe norvégien Peter Wessel Zapffe (1899-1990).

To see the complete text of this article, you need to buy a subscription. If you already have one, please log in.
Enjoy Unlimited Access to Tolerance.ca for less than 15 cents/day (CAD).


Contributor
This article is part of

Bjane Melkevik's Column
By Bjarne Melkevik

Bjarne Melkevik, L.L.D. Paris II, professor at the Faculty of Law, University Laval (Quebec), is a well-known author in legal philosophy, legal epistemology and legal methodology. His latest published books include “Horizons of legal philosophy” (1998 and 2004), “Reflections on legal... (Read next)

Read the other articles by Bjarne Melkevik
Follow us on ...
Facebook Twitter