RT Article T1 The Human as a Danger to Itself: Murder in the 180th Degree JF Anthropoetics VO 28 IS 1 A1 Fleming, Chris 1970- LA English YR 2022 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1942936494 AB This article examines Generative Anthropology with respect to its hypothesis that deferral is at the foundation of the human and draws out elements of GA as a lived philosophy or “spiritual discipline.” To this end, it examines the centrality of different modes of deferral in the successful treatment of addiction and the rôles of both deferral and resentment in facets of human psychopathology. It uses this preliminary discussion to reopen questions regarding the idea of the human as a “danger to itself,” and to ask whether our conception of intraspecific violence needs to include not merely those harms incurred by humans against others (exogenous), but those that include self-harm (autogenous), which is the leading cause of violent death in the contemporary world. It concludes by asking questions as to the potential relation between these forms of intraspecific violence and calls for further investigation into GA’s “ethics of deferral.” K1 Generative anthropology K1 Suicide K1 Eric Gans K1 Addiction K1 Mimetic Theory K1 deferral K1 Alcoholics Anonymous K1 Spirituality K1 intraspecific violence K1 Resentment