Abstract
The question ‘How does a person make an ethical decision?’ becomes all the more
compelling and problematic when trying to behave ethically during, as A
́
gnes Heller puts
it, ‘the total breakdown of ‘‘normal’’ ethical worlds’. In her philosophical work Heller
pieces together a moral compass internal to individual subjectivity to employ during such
times. Kierkegaard’s model of existential choice has played a formative role in Heller’s
solution to the problem. In my article I describe Heller’s Kierkegaardian framework of
choosing oneself as an ethical being and consider a recent critique of Heller’s Kierke-
gaardian ethics of personality by Richard J. Bernstein, continuing the substantively pro-
ductive tension between the irrational and rational forces that determine our ethical
actions. In the process, I show common ground between Bernstein and Heller through
an appropriation of Arendtian judgment. I turn to Heller’s most recent work in
The
Concept of the Beautiful
in order to make this common ground tangible.