In "Passions: 'An Oblique Offering'" Derrida summarized the debate about the relation of deconstruction to ethics. He saw a split between, on the one hand, those who criticize deconstruction as a modern form of immorality and irresponsibility and, on the other hand, those who were encouraged to find signs in his more recent texts that he had become more interested in ethics. In "Passions," Derrida rejected both observations as leading toward a restoration of morality and thus, in his view, a new dogmatic slumber. Derrida professed that he could imagine nothing worse than a community of complacent deconstructionists, happy in their good conscience. For himself, Derrida questioned the very names ethics, morality, politics, responsibility and ...