Abstract
Recent literature on forgiveness suggests that a successful account of the
phenomenon must satisfy at least three conditions: it must be able to explain how
forgiveness can be articulate, uncompromising, and elective. These three conditions
are not logically inconsistent, but the history of reflection on the ethics of forgiveness
nonetheless suggests that they are in tension. Accounts that emphasize articulateness
and uncompromisingness tend to suggest an excessively deflationary understanding of
electiveness, underestimating the degree to which forgiveness is a gift. Accounts that
emphasize electiveness, on the other hand, tend to weaken the safeguards that keep
forgiveness distinct from condonation, excuse, or mere servility. I argue in this paper
that we can do justice to the three conditions by understanding forgiveness in terms of
the concept of institution that Maurice Merleau-Ponty developed in his work from the
early- to mid-1950s.