This volume features eleven chapters by scholars from different disciplines, each providing a unique perspective on hope. It includes discussion and analysis of classical texts, Judeo-Christian traditions, non-religious contexts, epistemology, existentialism, Black oppression, Zen Buddhism, eschatology, theological anthropology, psychology and optimism, culture, education theory, and climate change. Hardly any stones are left unturned in this interdisciplinary collection of one of philosophy's most vexing virtues.
This volume features eleven chapters by scholars from different disciplines, each providing a unique perspective on hope. It includes discussion and analysis of classical texts, Judeo-Christian traditions, non-religious contexts, epistemology, existentialism, Black oppression, Zen Buddhism, eschatology, theological anthropology, psychology and optimism, culture, education theory, and climate change. Hardly any stones are left unturned in this interdisciplinary collection of one of philosophy's most vexing virtues.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Nancy E. Snow is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Kansas. She was co-director of The Self, Motivation and Virtue Project, a research initiative on the moral self, and the principal investigator of another research initiative, The Self, Virtue, and Public Life Project. She is the author of Virtue as Social Intelligence (Routledge, 2009), and Contemporary Virtue Ethics (Cambridge, 2020), and co-author of Understanding Virtue (Oxford, 2021). She has published over forty-five papers on virtue and ethics more broadly, and is the series editor of The Virtues, this fifteen-volume interdisciplinary series.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction by Nancy Snow * 1. Virtue or Vice? A Short Literary History of Hope by Adam Potkay * 2. Is Hope a Secular Virtue? Hope as the Virtue of the Possible by Beatrice Han-Pile and Robert Stern * 3. The Focus Theory of Hope by Andrew Chignell * 4. A Black Existential Reflection on Hope by Lewis R. Gordon * 5. Created and Fallen Hope: Theological Anthropology and Human Hoping by Willa Swenson-Lengyel * 6. Hope: An Interdisciplinary Examination by Liz Gulliford * 7. The Influence of Culture on Psychological Hope by Lisa M. Edwards and Kat McConnell * 8. Positive Fantasies About the Future Breed Hope by Gabriele Oettingen * 9. Hope and the Utopian Impulse by Darren Webb * 10. Adapting Environmental Hope by Allen Thompson * 11. Difficult Hope: Wendell Berry and Climate Change by Michael Lamb
* Introduction by Nancy Snow * 1. Virtue or Vice? A Short Literary History of Hope by Adam Potkay * 2. Is Hope a Secular Virtue? Hope as the Virtue of the Possible by Beatrice Han-Pile and Robert Stern * 3. The Focus Theory of Hope by Andrew Chignell * 4. A Black Existential Reflection on Hope by Lewis R. Gordon * 5. Created and Fallen Hope: Theological Anthropology and Human Hoping by Willa Swenson-Lengyel * 6. Hope: An Interdisciplinary Examination by Liz Gulliford * 7. The Influence of Culture on Psychological Hope by Lisa M. Edwards and Kat McConnell * 8. Positive Fantasies About the Future Breed Hope by Gabriele Oettingen * 9. Hope and the Utopian Impulse by Darren Webb * 10. Adapting Environmental Hope by Allen Thompson * 11. Difficult Hope: Wendell Berry and Climate Change by Michael Lamb
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