Fr. 146.00

Transpersonal Gratitude - Phenomenology and Ethics

English · Hardback

Will be released 10.11.2025

Description

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In this book, Taline Artinian takes a critical look at the existing discussion on dyadic forms of gratitude, from propositional to non-directed, and develops the concept of transpersonal gratitude, which captures the experience of thankfulness for a personally significant good in the absence of a benefactor. The concept of gratitude in philosophy has historically been centred around a triadic experience of gift, giver, and receiver, and it is only in the last two decades that a dyadic conceptualisation has begun to develop. Artinian focuses on the phenomenology and the ethical significance of transpersonal gratitude, to argue that this experience goes beyond mere appreciation or gladness and that its conceptualisation offers a framework for the understanding of gratitude as a virtue.
This book also examines transpersonal gratitude as an experience and disposition that shape our engagement with others and with the world at large. By situating it in relation to empathy, humility, and the fostering of a sense of connectedness, it argues for the role of transpersonal gratitude as a key component of the morally good and flourishing life.

List of contents

Ch 1: Being Grateful.- Ch 2: Philosophical Perspectives on Gratitude.- Ch 3: Transpersonal Gratitude.- Ch 4: Phenomenological and Experiential Features of Transpersonal Gratitude.- Ch 5: Expressing Transpersonal Gratitude.- Ch 6: The Moral Significance of Transpersonal Gratitude.- Ch 7: Transpersonal Gratitude and The World at Large.- Ch 8: Conclusion.

About the author

Dr Taline Artinian, PhD, is a philosopher, psychologist and psychotherapist with extensive academic and clinical experience. She is currently a lecturer in the Psychology Department at the University of Exeter and maintains a private psychotherapy practice in Exeter, UK.

Summary

In this book, Taline Artinian takes a critical look at the existing discussion on dyadic forms of gratitude, from propositional to non-directed, and develops the concept of transpersonal gratitude, which captures the experience of thankfulness for a personally significant good in the absence of a benefactor. The concept of gratitude in philosophy has historically been centred around a triadic experience of gift, giver, and receiver, and it is only in the last two decades that a dyadic conceptualisation has begun to develop. Artinian focuses on the phenomenology and the ethical significance of transpersonal gratitude, to argue that this experience goes beyond mere appreciation or gladness and that its conceptualisation offers a framework for the understanding of gratitude as a virtue.
This book also examines transpersonal gratitude as an experience and disposition that shape our engagement with others and with the world at large. By situating it in relation to empathy, humility, and the fostering of a sense of connectedness, it argues for the role of transpersonal gratitude as a key component of the morally good and flourishing life.

Product details

Authors Taline Artinian
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Release 10.11.2025
 
EAN 9783032069313
ISBN 978-3-0-3206931-3
No. of pages 142
Illustrations XIII, 142 p. 2 illus., 1 illus. in color.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > General, dictionaries

Psychologie: Emotionen, Emotion, Philosophie des Geistes, Ethics, Phenomenology, Phänomenologie und Existenzphilosophie, Psychology, Genealogy, gratitude, Moral Philosophy and Applied Ethics, Environmental Ethics, Moral Psychology, Virtue Ethics, philosophy of gratitude

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