1st Edition

Virtues of Independence and Dependence on Virtues

Edited By Ludvig Beckman Copyright 2003
    166 Pages
    by Routledge

    166 Pages
    by Routledge

    Debate about the concept of virtue is a persistent theme in academic discourse. One strand of thinking attempts to examine and reconstruct ethical theories with the aim of formulating a new morality or ethics. A second strand of thought, more strongly represented in this work, attempts to explore the social and political world deploying the concept of virtue. Thus, this volume crosses the established borders of academic disciplines in order to provide a richer and more comprehensive understanding of the place of virtues in contemporary western societies.The editors hold that the dominating virtue of our culture and society is the virtue of independence. Yet independence, or individual autonomy, is contingent upon a diverse, and so far ill-understood, set of cultural, biological, economic, ethical, and political practices. The idea of individuality is in other words supervening on a web of formal and informal relations. This volume therefore attempts to improve our understanding of the prevailing ethos of independence as well as of the mechanisms and practices sustaining it.Virtues are examined in specific contexts. Authors explore what we can learn about our dependence on virtues from the archaic Greek culture. They examine the relevance of virtue-ethics to the understanding of day-to-day practices. And they look at the place of virtues in understanding the norms of independence and liberty. Other contributions attend to the virtues of independence and its challenges, examining possible philosophical challenges, questioning whether independence is always a virtue, and how the virtues of justice fare given a commitment to the virtues of independence.The final portion of the book explore the empirical consequences of the virtues of independence. Among the questions addressed are how personal independence affects political and economic institutions, and the connections between norms of independence and the growth of modernity. This volume is an important contribution to contemporary understanding of what constitutes virtuous and ethical behavior.

    1: Roots; 2: Reverence, Respect, and Dependence; 3: Aesthetic Experience and Virtue: Narrative, Emotions, and the Understanding of Others; 4: Autonomy's Sources and the Impact of Globalization; 5: Personal Independence and Social Justice: Contradictions of Liberal Virtues?; 6: Autonomy and Moral Responsibility: On Virtues and the Common Good1; 7: The Politics of Virtue in the French Revolution; 8: Volunteering as Virtue; 9: The Relation between Independence and Trust

    Biography

    Ludvig Beckman