%0 Journal Article %T Radical Courage: Bartolom¨¦ de Las Casas and his defense of the American Indians %A Jes¨²s Jambrina %J Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis %D 2011 %I %X In his book Radical Hope. Ethics in the face of cultural devastation (2006) Jonathan Lear elaborates on the importance of studying historical contexts in order to achieve a deeper understanding of ethics(8). Writing on how Native American Chief Plenty Coup (1848-1932) dealt with the devastation of the Crow people¡¯s way of life, Lear goes beyond the classical definitions of concepts like hope and courage, reinterpreting them in terms of their ¡®radical¡¯ character.As we all know, ¡°radical¡± is a very controversial word today. It isoften used to define so- called ¡°anti-establishment activism,¡± which often includes acts of violence. However, the first meaning of ¡°radical¡± is not its similarity with ¡°extreme¡±; on the contrary, radical comes from the Latin word radix(root). This meaning was assimilated into the discipline of Linguistics and is used to refer to the ¡®stem¡¯ of words. The term ¡®radical¡¯ is also used by scientists in Chemistry, Mathematics and Physics to identify basic principles that allow for different developments within natural processes. I think Lear¡¯s use of the adjective ¡°radical¡± is meant to convey the older, more ancient sense of the term ¨Cits sense as original and fundamental¨C and not its current political usage and its association with violence. For Lear and his argument about the Crow people, ¡®radical¡¯ means the ability to maintain the core values of the community while moving ahead in difficult times. %U http://www.viterbo.edu/uploadedFiles/academics/letters/philosophy/atp/Jambrina.pdf