
In Their New Book, Emotion, Character, And Responsibility, John Sabini And Maury Silver Examine A Conflict In The Way That Psychologists, Philosophers, And Ordinary People Think About Character. Most Of Us Share An Intuition That Emotions Are Central To Who We Are And The Characters We Have, Even Though Emotions Are Unchosen. Yet We Also Share The Intuition That Action, Choice, And Responsibility Are What Count About Our Characters. This Book Deals With This Conflict By Exploring The Relations Between The Chosen And Unchosen, Moral And Nonmoral, In Sincerity, Loyalty, Sympathy, Shame, Guilt, And Embarrassment As They Affect Our Characters. The Conflict Is Resolved By Finding An Aesthetic As Well As Moral Basis Of Character. Along The Way The Authors Consider Questions Such As Can One Truly Avow Ones Feelings And Still Be Insincere? What, If Anything, Is Lacking In The Star Trek Character Mr. Spock? Why Is Loyalty Toward Particular People And Not People In General A Duty? Is It A Good Idea For Guilt To Replace Shame? How Can We Describe Genuine Self-deception Without Relying On Unconscious Knowledge? The Book Ends With The Radical Proposal That Some Of The Emotions Do Not Exist, At Least Not In The Way That Motives Exist. We Will Not Find Them On Any Present Or Future Brain Scan. And Yet, The Authors Argue, Emotions Matter.
This book investigates the fundamental tension between the unchosen nature of human emotions and the societal expectation that character is defined by conscious choice and moral responsibility. Authors John Sabini and Maury Silver, both established scholars in psychology and philosophy, utilize a multidisciplinary framework to reconcile these opposing intuitions. By analyzing specific emotional states and their role in moral agency, they argue that character is constructed through both aesthetic and ethical dimensions, ultimately challenging conventional understandings of how emotions function as motives.
What You Will Find
Experts and academics frequently cite this work for its rigorous attempt to bridge the gap between psychological theory and philosophical ethics. Readers often note the intellectual density of the prose, which requires careful engagement with the authors' unconventional arguments regarding the existence and function of emotions.
Page Count:
192
Publication Date:
1998-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019535284X
ISBN-13:
9780195352849
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