Synopses & Reviews
Though virtue ethics is enjoying a resurgence, the topic of virtue cultivation has been largely neglected by philosophers. This volume remedies this gap, featuring mostly new essays, commissioned for this collection, by philosophers, theologians, and psychologists at the forefront of research into virtue. Each contribution focuses on some aspect of virtue development, either by highlighting virtue cultivation within distinctive traditions of ethical or religious thought, or by taking a developmental perspective to yield fresh insights into criticisms of virtue ethics, or by examining the science that explains virtue development. The essays by Russell and Driver investigate virtue cultivation or problems associated with it from Aristotelian and utilitarian perspectives. Slote addresses virtue development from the sentimentalist standpoint. Swanton and Cureton and Hill explore self-improvement, the former with an eye to offering solutions to critiques of virtue ethics, the latter from a Kantian ethical vantage point. Slingerland examines contemporary psychology as well as virtue development in the Confucian tradition to counter situationist criticisms of virtue ethics. Flanagan, Bucar, and Herdt examine how virtue is cultivated in the Buddhist, Islamic, and Christian traditions, respectively. Narvaez, Thompson, and McAdams offer descriptive insights from psychology into virtue development. The result is a collection of extremely creative essays that not only fills the current gap but also promises to stimulate new work on a philosophically neglected yet vital topic.
About the Author
Nancy E. Snow is Professor of Philosophy at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Her research interests are in virtue ethics and moral psychology. Her most recent book is
Virtue Intelligence: An Empirically Grounded Theory (New York: Routledge, 2010).
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter One: Aristotle on Cultivating Virtue
Daniel C. Russell
Chapter Two: Mill, Moral Sentimentalism, and the Cultivation of Virtue
Julia Driver
Chapter Three: The Roots of Empathy
Michael Slote
Chapter Four: Kant on Virtue and the Virtues
Adam Cureton and Thomas Hill
Chapter Five: Cultivating Virtue: Two Problems for Virtue Ethics
Christine Swanton
Chapter Six: The Situationist Critique and Early Confucian Virtue Ethics
Edward Slingerland
Chapter Seven: It Takes a Metaphysics, Raising Virtuous Buddhists
Owen Flanagan
Chapter Eight: Islam and the Cultivation Of Character: Ibn Miskawayh's Synthesis and the Case of the Veil
Elizabeth M. Bucar
Chapter Nine: Frailty, Fragmentation, and Social Dependency in the Cultivation of Christian Virtue
Jennifer A. Herdt
Chapter Ten: The Co-Construction of Virtue: Epigenetics, Development and Culture
Darcia Narvaez
Chapter Eleven: The Development of Virtue: A Perspective from Developmental Psychology
Ross A. Thompson
Chapter Twelve: Psychological Science and the Nicomachean Ethics: Virtuous Actors, Agents, and Authors
Dan P. McAdams
Index