Fr. 220.00

Difficult Virtues - An Aristotelian Perspective

English · Hardback

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Description

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In this book, Howard J. Curzer describes eight virtues that have proven problematic to virtue ethicists. Integrity has been the subject of wildly different accounts. Open-mindedness and forgiveness are described in ways that many endorse, but few seek to practice. Accounts of tolerance and civility generally fit only the privileged. Finally, good timing, ambition, and creativity have attracted almost no attention at all. Curzer offers novel, plausible accounts of all of these eight difficult virtues, and demonstrates that they possess the standard features of Aristotelian virtues (for example, conformity to the Doctrine of the Mean). This enlarges the scope of Aristotelian virtue ethics by enabling it to cover eight additional spheres of human life.
Using these difficult virtues as springboards and extrapolating from some of Aristotle's remarks, Curzer codifies some standard features of Aristotelian virtues, and speculatively suggests additional features to enhance the descriptive and prescriptive power of Aristotelian virtue ethics. Thus, Curzer adds to the standard list of Aristotelian virtues and to the standard list of features that make virtues Aristotelian.
Each difficult virtue is different, but certain themes thread through all of them: self-construction, social critique, and significant creation. Curzer's accounts of these virtues illuminate the ways people forge their own identities, struggle to acquire virtue despite disadvantage, and produce and appreciate novelty.

List of contents

1. Introduction 2. Introducing the Virtue of Good Timing and Some Surprising Functions of Practical Reason 3. Tolerance and Open-Mindedness Joined at the Hip 4. An Aristotelian Account of Civility 5. Tweaking Open-mindedness 6. The Mirage of Unconditional Forgiveness 7. Integrity Uncluttered 8. The Will to Power, the Ambition of the Powerless, and the Web to the Rescue 9.The Way of the Creator Detours through Cyberspace to Bypass the Gatekeepers 10. An Aristotelian Architectonic: Recapitulation, Extrapolation, and Wild Speculation. Bibliography Index

About the author

Howard J. Curzer is a President’s Excellence in Research Professor at Texas Tech University. His publications include Aristotle and the Virtues (Oxford UP, 2012), Virtue Ethics for the Real World: Improving Character without Idealization (Routledge, 2023), and articles on ancient philosophy, contemporary virtue ethics, the Confucian tradition, moral development, research ethics, biomedical ethics, and the Hebrew Bible.

Summary

This book describes 8 virtues that have proven problematic to virtue ethicists. Curzer offers novel accounts of all 8 difficult virtues, and demonstrates that they possess the standard features of Aristotelian virtues.

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