Fr. 100.00

Regret

English · Hardback

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Description

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Philosopher Paddy McQueen provides a detailed examination of the nature of regret and its role in decision-making. Additionally, he explores how experiences of regret are shaped by social discourses, especially those about gender and parenthood.

List of contents










  • Introduction

  • Part One: The Philosophy of Regret

  • Chapter One: Making Sense of Regret

  • 1.1. Introduction

  • 1.2. How To Develop an Account of Regret

  • 1.3. What Regret Is (And What It Is Not)

  • 1.4. The Psychology of Regret

  • 1.5. Are There "Types" Of Regret?

  • 1.6. The Rational and Intelligible Limits of Regret

  • Chapter Two: On The "Fittingness" Of Regret

  • 2.1. Introduction

  • 2.2. The Moralistic Fallacy

  • 2.3. The "Shape" And "Size" Of Regret

  • 2.4. Is It Always Unreasonable to Regret?

  • Chapter Three: Reasons, Mistakes and Justified Decisions

  • 3.1. Introduction

  • 3.2. Practical Identity and Decision-Justification

  • 3.3. "Epistemically Available" Reasons

  • 3.4. Perspective-Dependent and Perspective-Independent Reasons

  • 3.5. Retrospective Justification

  • 3.6. Reasons And Time

  • 3.7. Self-Transformations

  • 3.8. Akrasia And Regret

  • Chapter Four: Regret, Agency and Responsibility

  • 4.1. Introduction

  • 4.2. Regret And the Scope of Responsibility

  • 4.3. Against Williams's "Agent-Regret"

  • 4.4. Description, Intention and The Framing of Responsibility

  • 4.5. Accidents, Apologies and Interpersonal Relations

  • Chapter Five: Regret, Valuing and Virtue

  • 5.1. Introduction

  • 5.2. Regret, Attachment and Affirmation

  • 5.3. Assessing Wallace's Account

  • 5.4. Regret And Unrealized Values

  • 5.5. Conflicts Of Value and Tragic Choices

  • Coda: Aristotle and Stoicism

  • Part Two: The Politics of Regret

  • Chapter Six: The Social Structuring of Regret

  • 6.1. Introduction

  • 6.2. The Cultural Politics of Emotion

  • 6.3. The Social Contours of Regret

  • 6.4. Pro-Natalism and Regret

  • 6.5. Regretting Motherhood

  • Chapter Seven: Voluntary Sterilisation and Regret

  • 7.1. Introduction

  • 7.2. Unsuccessful Sterilisation Requests

  • 7.3. Autonomy And Medical Paternalism

  • 7.4. Sterilisation, Well-Being and Informed Consent

  • 7.5. Permanency, Commitment and Choice

  • 7.6. Credibility, Identity and Epistemic Injustice

  • Chapter Eight: Abortion and Regret

  • 8.1. Introduction

  • 8.2. The Politicisation of Abortion Regret

  • 8.3. The Rise to Prominence of Abortion Regret

  • 8.4. Ripple Effects

  • 8.5. The Normative Force of Abortion Regret

  • Chapter Nine: Trans Regret

  • 9.1. Introduction

  • 9.2. A Note on Terminology

  • 9.3. The Purported "Problem" Of Trans Regret

  • 9.4. Personally Transformative Treatment

  • 9.5. Trans Regret and The Authentic Self

  • Chapter Ten: Living with And Without Regret

  • 10.1. Introduction

  • 10.2. Refusing To Regret

  • 10.3. The Waxing and Waning of Regret

  • 10.4. Self-Forgiveness and Regret

  • 10.5. Looking To the Future

  • 10.6. Regulating Regret

  • Bibliography

  • Index



About the author

Paddy McQueen is a Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at Swansea University. Prior to that, he was a lecturer at Queen's University Belfast and an Irish Research Council post-doctoral researcher at University College Dublin. In addition to various journal articles, he has written three books, the most recent of which is entitled Critical Phenomenology: An Introduction, co-authored with Elisa Magrì (Polity, 2022).

Summary

Philosopher Paddy McQueen provides a detailed examination of the nature of regret and its role in decision-making. Additionally, he explores how experiences of regret are shaped by social discourses, especially those about gender and parenthood.

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