Aristotle and the virtues / Howard J. Curzer.
| Author/creator | Curzer, Howard J. |
| Format | Book |
| Publication Info | Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2012. |
| Description | 451 pages ; 25 cm |
| Electronic Location | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
| Supplemental Content | http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199693726.001.0001 |
| Subjects |
| Spine title | Aristotle and the virtues |
| Contents | Moral virtues: Courage and continence -- Temperence and incontinence -- Liberality and benevolence -- Magnificence and heroic virtue -- Megalopsychia and appropriate ambition -- Good temper and forgiveness -- Wit and wounding -- Friendliness and civility -- Truthfulness and integrity. -- Justice and friendship: General, particular and poetic justice -- Varieties of friendship -- Justice in friendship. -- Moral development: Practical wisdom and reciprocity of virtue -- Aristotle's painful path to virtue : the many and generous-minded -- Shame and moral development : the incontinent, the continent, the naturally virtuous and the properly virtuous -- Aristotles's losers : the vicious, the brutish, natural slaves and tragic heros -- Happiness and luck. |
| Summary | Aristotle is the father of virtue ethics - a discipline which is receiving renewed scholarly attention. Yet Aristotle's accounts of the individual virtues remain opaque, for most contemporary commentators of Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics have focused upon other matters. In contrast, Howard J. Curzer takes Aristotle's detailed description of the individual virtues to be central to his ethical theory. Working through the Nicomachean Ethics virtue-by-virtue, explaining and generally defending Aristotle's claims, this book brings each of Aristotle's virtues alive. A new Aristotle emerges, an Aristotle fascinated by the details of the individual virtues.00. |
| Bibliography note | Includes bibliographical references (p. [426]-436) and index. |
| ISBN | 9780199693726 |
| ISBN | 0199693722 |