Fr. 145.00

A Defence of Theological Virtue Ethics

English · Hardback

Will be released 02.11.2023

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Informationen zum Autor Adam Willows is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Centre for Theology, Science and Human Flourishing at the University of Notre Dame, USA. He specializes in philosophical theology, with particular interests in normative and meta-ethics, virtue, free will theory, and philosophy of religion, and has published articles in the Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy , The Thomist , and Religious Studies . Klappentext The philosophical revival of virtue ethics has not gone unnoticed by theologians, who have made some of the most important contributions to the 'turn to virtue'. Largely absent, though, is a theological response to the many criticisms that have been levelled at modern virtue ethics. This book fills that gap, addressing various concerns including claims that virtue ethics is incomplete and inconsistent; that it flies in the face of psychological reality; and that it commits itself to unpalatable moral positions such as egoism, relativism and particularism. To each of these it gives a response grounded in moral and metaphysical theological commitments, often suggesting new approaches not explored by secular thinkers. In doing so it refutes the criticisms at hand and makes a positive case for a distinctively theological virtue ethics. Vorwort An argument for a theological response to contemporary philosophical criticisms of virtue ethics. Zusammenfassung The philosophical revival of virtue ethics has not gone unnoticed by theologians, who have made some of the most important contributions to the ‘turn to virtue’. Largely absent, though, is a theological response to the many criticisms that have been levelled at modern virtue ethics. This book fills that gap, addressing various concerns including claims that virtue ethics is incomplete and inconsistent; that it flies in the face of psychological reality; and that it commits itself to unpalatable moral positions such as egoism, relativism and particularism. To each of these it gives a response grounded in moral and metaphysical theological commitments, often suggesting new approaches not explored by secular thinkers. In doing so it refutes the criticisms at hand and makes a positive case for a distinctively theological virtue ethics. Inhaltsverzeichnis Chapter 1: The Need for a Defence of Theological Virtue Ethics Chapter 2: Virtue Ethics as an Independent Normative Theory Chapter 3: Virtue Ethics, Right Action and Aquinas Chapter 4: Situations, Virtue and Christ Chapter 5: Virtue Ethics and Moral Particularism Chapter 6: Virtue Ethics and Moral Relativism Chapter 7: Is Virtue Ethics Egoist? Chapter 8: Key Positions in Theological Virtue Ethics Bibliography Index...

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