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Phenomenology and Virtue Ethics.

The correlation between person and environment has long been a central focus of phenomenological analysis. While phenomenology is usually understood as a descriptive discipline showing how essential features of the human encounter with things and people in the world are articulated, phenomenology is...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Hermberg, Kevin
Otros Autores: Gyllenhammer, Paul
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: London : Bloomsbury Publishing, 2013.
Colección:Continuum issues in phenomenology and hermeneutics.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Notes on Contributors; Phenomenology and Virtue Ethics: An Introduction; Organization of the volume; Part I Phenomenology and the Tradition; Chapter 1 Phainomenon and Logos in Aristotle's Ethics; Aristotle's philosophy; Aristotle's ethics; Virtue; The logos of virtuous living; Measuring virtue; Logos, deliberation, and action; Notes; Chapter 2 "Disimpropriation" and Infused Virtue: The Question of (Christian) Virtue Ethics in the Phenomenology of Michel Henry; Life as the ground of a fundamental ontology; The problem of forgetfulness of life.
  • Life's eudaimonic claim and the phenomenological paradox of recollectionHenry's (christian) ethics: "Disimpropriation" and infused virtue; Notes; Chapter 3 Being and Virtuousness: Toward a Platonic-Heideggerian Virtue Ethics; Introduction; Heidegger and the good; Heideggerian phenomenology; Virtue, happiness, and the good; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 4 Horizon Intentionality and Aristotelian Friendship; Horizon intentionality; The horizons of friendship; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 5 Value, Affectivity, and Virtue in Aristotle, Scheler, and von Hildebrand; Values, action, and affectivity.
  • Virtue, affectivity, and prohairesisProhairesis, preference, and values; Notes; Part II Theoretical and Contemporary Comparative Accounts; Chapter 6 Phenomenology, Eudaimonia, and the Virtues; Phenomenology as eidetic; The issue concerning normativity; Intentionality's teleology; Truthfulness in the axiological and volitional spheres; Goods for an agent and the goods of agency; Toward the virtues; Notes; Chapter 7 Phenomenology and Virtue Ethics: Complementary Antitheoretical Methodological and Ethical Trajectories?; Phenomenological method(s); Phenomenology and ethics.
  • Dreyfus and moral maturityThe good, moral virtue, and flourishing in phenomenology; Ethics and time: Historicity and futurity; Theory and antitheory: Phenomenology and virtue ethics; Notes; Chapter 8 Virtues, Values, and the Heart: The Phenomenology of Scheler and von Hildebrand; Values and the heart; Virtues and their ground; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 9 The Self that Recedes: A Phenomenology of Virtue; Perception, affordances, and virtue; Flow experience: Expertise and moral action; The recession of the self in virtuous action; Conclusion; Notes.
  • Part III Application of Phenomenology as a Virtue DisciplineChapter 10 The Virtues of Agency: A Phenomenology of Confidence, Courage, and Creativity; Agency; The virtues of agency I: Primary self-confidence; The virtues of agency II: Primary courage; The virtues of agency III: Primary creativity; Conclusion: Ethical agency; Notes; Chapter 11 Heideggerian Perfectionism and the Phenomenology of the Pedagogical Truth Event; Notes; Chapter 12 Descent to the Things Themselves: The Virtue of Dissent; Observing and living according to the natural order of things.