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Calculus

2018, Deconstructing the Death Penalty: Derrida’s Death Penalty Seminars, Edited by Kelly Oliver and Stephanie Marie Straub

In the second volume of the Death Penalty Seminars Derrida establishes a relation between capital punishment and reason itself, declaring that the question of the death penalty is also the question of reason. Delving into the etymological history of reason, from logos to ratio and Grund, Derrida assesses reason as a kind of calculation. What is calculation? Is it any wonder that the thinker responsible for the principle of reason was also responsible for the invention of the calculus? What is the relation between criminal law and calculation? In the Death Penalty Seminars Derrida writes that the death penalty is bound up with a calculating decision, “the blind calculating drive of a calculation that presents itself as reason itself.” The death penalty implies a calculation prescribed by talionic law, a calculation involving retribution or punishment in exchange for the crime. Since German uses the language of reckoning or calculation and the language of law or justification in order to render ratio, Heidegger links the calculating function of reason with the justificatory function of law. What filiation is there between the law and calculation and calculability? How does Derrida’s thinking of calculation aid us in an analysis of capital punishment?

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