Yeomans reconstructs Hegel's expansion of Kant's notion of autonomy and argues that the result is a striking pluralism in moral psychology and the concept of action.
Yeomans reconstructs Hegel's expansion of Kant's notion of autonomy and argues that the result is a striking pluralism in moral psychology and the concept of action.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Christopher Yeomans is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Purdue University. He is the author of Freedom and Reflection: Hegel and the Logic of Agency (OUP, 2011).
Inhaltsangabe
* Abbreviations * Acknowledgments * Introduction * Part I: General Framework * Chapter 1: Virtue and Individuality * §1. Virtue as the Individualization of Duty * §2. Virtue as Duties that Persons have in Virtue of also Being Animals * §3. Virtue as the Fight between Reason and the Inclinations * §4. The Development of Talents as a Duty of Virtue * Chapter 2. The Empty Formalism Objection in the Context of Individualized Virtue * Chapter 3: Fichte and the Problem of Individual Effectiveness * Chapter 4: A Moral Psychology of Talents and Interests * §1: Talents and Interests * §2: Subjectivity and Objectivity * Part II: Experiments in Individuality * Chapter 5: The Changing Nature of Objective Content * §1: The Distinctively Moral Form of Objective Content * §2: Farmers * §3: Soldiers * Chapter 6: Talents and the Shaping of Action * §1: Talent and Intentional Self-Knowledge * §2: Craft and Industrial Producers * §3: Scholars * Chapter 7: The Concreteness of the Good * §1: The Effectiveness of the Good * §2: The Public Estate * §3: Merchants * Part III: Conclusion * Chapter 8: Hegelian Self-Determination * §1: The Reciprocal Inversion of Moral and Material Ends * §2: Character as Medium and Process of Expression * §3: Non-Empiricist Action Explanations * §4: Objective Criteria and Deception * Index
* Abbreviations * Acknowledgments * Introduction * Part I: General Framework * Chapter 1: Virtue and Individuality * §1. Virtue as the Individualization of Duty * §2. Virtue as Duties that Persons have in Virtue of also Being Animals * §3. Virtue as the Fight between Reason and the Inclinations * §4. The Development of Talents as a Duty of Virtue * Chapter 2. The Empty Formalism Objection in the Context of Individualized Virtue * Chapter 3: Fichte and the Problem of Individual Effectiveness * Chapter 4: A Moral Psychology of Talents and Interests * §1: Talents and Interests * §2: Subjectivity and Objectivity * Part II: Experiments in Individuality * Chapter 5: The Changing Nature of Objective Content * §1: The Distinctively Moral Form of Objective Content * §2: Farmers * §3: Soldiers * Chapter 6: Talents and the Shaping of Action * §1: Talent and Intentional Self-Knowledge * §2: Craft and Industrial Producers * §3: Scholars * Chapter 7: The Concreteness of the Good * §1: The Effectiveness of the Good * §2: The Public Estate * §3: Merchants * Part III: Conclusion * Chapter 8: Hegelian Self-Determination * §1: The Reciprocal Inversion of Moral and Material Ends * §2: Character as Medium and Process of Expression * §3: Non-Empiricist Action Explanations * §4: Objective Criteria and Deception * Index
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