Ulteriori informazioni
This book offers a complete overview of the complex topic of reasonableness. Ranging through ethics, political theory and legal theory, the author shows how 'reasonable' is an unescapable evaluative term. One uses this concept to evaluate positively or negatively - 'it is unreasonable!' - both our conduct and that of others. However, we are often not aware of the presuppositions behind our use of the concept. Especially the legal use, both in civil and in common law, reveals a large variety of meanings and the so called 'multifacetedness' of reasonableness. In an age in which the environmental crisis or 'global climate change' threatens our style of life we badly need criteria of evaluation that we all can share. This book therefore provides a unitary conception that connects to the ethics of virtues as the fabric that links the many uses of 'the reasonable'.
Sommario
Chapter 1. Social Psychology Theories, Unity of Virtues and Reasonableness.- Chapter 2. Human Flourishing: Between Epistemic and Ethical Reasonableness.- Chapter 3. Toward a Theory of Reasonableness.- Chapter 4. Is the Reasonable Person a Person of Virtue?.- Chapter 5. Ethics of Virtues and the Education of the Reasonable Judge.- Chapter 6. Continuity Between Ethics and Politics in EU Citizenship. The Model of the Reasonable Citizen.- Chapter 7. Taking Populism Seriously: A Conservative Ethos for Liberal Democracy?.- Chapter 8. Liberal Perfectionism and the Virtues.- Chapter 9. Environmental Virtue Ethics According to Reasonableness.
Info autore
Michele Mangini works in the Department of Law at the Università degli Studi di Bari Aldo Moro. Mangini researches the foundations of political theory, liberal perfectionism, ethics of virtues and legal reasoning. His next project concerns a conservative theory hinging on the ethics of virtues and reasonableness.