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ansell-pearson, keith; james, david - the empathetic emotions in the history of philosophy
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The Empathetic Emotions in the History of Philosophy

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Genere:Libro
Lingua: Inglese
Pubblicazione: 06/2025





Note Editore

Empathy is widely discussed, both in philosophy and more generally. One might ask what empathy itself is and how it relates to specific emotions, such as sympathy. This volume is concerned with theories of emotions that can be described as empathetic, either because they presuppose the human capacity for empathy or because they are essential to how empathy operates. By exploring how Western philosophers-from Ancient Greece up to the twentieth century-have understood these emotions, it becomes possible not only to gain a deeper understanding of certain empathetic emotions and their relation to the concept of empathy, but to also see how these emotions are placed within a broader moral, social, or religious context. Taking into account this context is essential when it comes to engaging with a number of compelling questions. Does sympathy provide an adequate basis for a theory of human sociability and fellowship? What roles do compassion and pity play in our moral lives, and in the formation of the practical identities of human beings? Can the altruistic character and concern for others that is traditionally ascribed to certain emotions be reconciled with competing values like self-love and the self-directedness of its concerns? Empathetic Emotions in the History of Philosophy provides answers to these important questions.




Sommario

1 - The Early History of âNaturalâ Sympathy: Contagious Affect and Universal Kinship in the Hellenistic Mediterranean
2 - Between Inhumane Detachment and the Darker Sides of Empathy: Stoicism on the Empathetic Emotions (including Pity)
3 - Towards âa merely excusable lifeâ: Reason, Imagination, and the Empathic Emotions in Montaigneâs Ethics
4 - The Empathetic Emotions in Seventeenth-Century France: Descartes and Malebranche on Pity and Compassion
5 - From Evil, Useless Pity to Active Empathy or generositas: Empathetic Emotions in Spinozaâs Ethics
6 - Hume on Sympathy, Humanity, and the Passions
7 - Rousseau on the Natural Goodness of Pity
8 - Adam Smith, Political Stability, and the Pull of Sympathy
9 - Sophie de Grouchy on Sympathy, Economic Inequality, and the Corruption of Moral Sentiments
10 - Kant on Reason, Feeling, and Human Caring
11 - Schopenhauerâs Ethics of Compassion: Pantheistic not Pessimistic
12 - The Connection between Love and Compassion in Kierkegaardâs Works of Love
13 - Envisioning Others without Pretence: Husserl and Stein on the Irreducibility, Complexity, and Value of Empathy
14 - Education Towards Empathy: Adornoâs Theory of Coldness Reconstructed
15 - Simone Weil and the Empathetic Emotions




Autore

Keith Ansell-Pearson is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Warwick, where he taught from 1993 until his retirement in 2021. He was previously Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Malawi (1985-87) and Lecturer in Modern Political Thought at Queen Mary College of London University (1988-1993). In 2013-14 he was a Senior Visiting Research Fellow in the Humanities at Rice University. David James is Reader in Philosophy at the University of Warwick. His publications include Property and its Forms in Classical German Philosophy (2023), Practical Necessity, Freedom, and History: From Hobbes to Marx (2021), and Rousseau and German Idealism: Freedom, Dependence and Necessity (2013). He is also the editor of A Critical Guide to Hegel's Elements of the Philosophy of Right (2017) and co-editor (with Günter Zöller) of The Cambridge Companion to Fichte (2016).










Altre Informazioni

ISBN:

9780192856722

Condizione: Nuovo
Dimensioni: 243 x 23.0 x 163 mm Ø 602 gr
Formato: Copertina rigida
Pagine Arabe: 304


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