Fr. 149.00

Normative Animal? - On Anthropological Significance of Social, Moral, Linguistic Norms

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An interdisciplinary group of scholars investigates the claim that humans are essentially normative animals. They do so by looking at the nature and relations of three types of norms, or putative norms¿social, moral, and linguistic¿and asking whether they might be different expressions of one basic structure unique to humankind.

Table des matières










  • Foreword

  • Part I: Introductory

  • 1. Might We Be Essentially Normative Animals?

  • Neil Roughley

  • 2. On Social, Moral and Linguistic Norms. The Contributions to This Volume

  • Neil Roughley and Kurt Bayertz

  • Part II: Social Norms

  • 3. There Ought to be Roots. Evolutionary Precursors of Social Norms and Conventions in Non-Human Primates

  • Peter Kappeler, Claudia Fichtel and Carel van Schaik

  • 4. On the Human Addiction to Norms. Social Norms and Cultural Universals of Normativity

  • Christoph Antweiler

  • 5. On the Identification and Analysis of Social Norms and the Heuristic Relevance of Deviant Behaviour

  • Karl Mertens

  • 6. On the Uniqueness of Human Normative Attitudes

  • Marco F.H. Schmidt and Hannes Rakoczy

  • Part III: Moral Norms

  • 7. The Evolution of Human Normativity: The Role of Prosociality and Reputation Management

  • Carel van Schaik and Judith Burkart

  • 8. The Form of Morality: Its Importance and Emergence

  • Kurt Bayertz

  • 9. Joint Activities and Moral Obligation

  • Holmer Steinfath

  • 10. The Development of Moral and Social Norms, Coordination in Decision-Making, and the Implications of Social Opposition

  • Elliot Turiel and Audun Dahl

  • 11. Moral Obligation from the Outside In

  • Neil Roughley

  • Part IV: Linguistic Norms?

  • 12. Language Evolution and Linguistic Norms

  • Nikola Kompa

  • 13. The Normative Nature of Language

  • Nick J. Enfield, Jack Sidnell

  • 14. Can there be Linguistic Norms?

  • Anne Reboul

  • 15. The Normativity of Meaning Revisited

  • Hanjo Glock

  • Part V: Afterword

  • 16. Normative Guidance, Deontic Statuses and the Normative Animal Thesis

  • Neil Roughley

  • References



A propos de l'auteur

Neil Roughley is Chair for Philosophical Anthropology and Ethics at the University of Duisburg-Essen. He specializes in metaethics, action theory, philosophical psychology, and the theory of human nature. His historical interests include the classical figures of ethical sentimentalism, particularly Adam Smith and David Hume, as well as the history of action theory. He is author of Wanting and Intending: Elements of a Philosophy of Practical Mind (Springer Macmillan, 2015), has edited several volumes, including Forms of Fellow Feeling: Empathy, Sympathy, Concern and Moral Agency (Cambridge University Press, 2018), and was recently guest editor of a special issue of Philosophical Psychology, vol. 31/5 (2018), on Tomasello's A Natural History of Human Morality.

Kurt Bayertz is Senior-Professor of Practical Philosophy at the University of Munster. His research focuses on ethics, anthropology, and selected topics in the history of philosophy. He is author of

Technological Intervention in Human Reproduction as a Philosophical Problem (Cambridge: Cambridge UP 1994), among other books. His book Der aufrechte Gang ("The Upright Posture") received the Tractatus Prize for philosophy.

Résumé

An interdisciplinary group of scholars investigates the claim that humans are essentially normative animals. They do so by looking at the nature and relations of three types of norms, or putative norms--social, moral, and linguistic--and asking whether they might be different expressions of one basic structure unique to humankind.

Texte suppl.

A work that will reshape the way scholars view late imperial Austrian society and culture... a compelling account.

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