
How Should You Live? Should You Devote Yourself To Perfecting A Single Talent Or Try To Live A Balanced Life? Should You Lighten Up And Have More Fun, Or Buckle Down And Try To Achieve Greatness? Should You Try To Be A Better Friend? Should You Be Self-critical Or Self-accepting? And How Should You Decide Among The Possibilities Open To You? Should You Consult Experts, Listen To Your Parents, Do Lots Of Research? Make Lists Of Pros And Cons, Or Go With Your Gut? These Are Not Questions That Can Be Answered In General Or In The Abstract. Rather, These Questions Are Addressed To The First Person Point Of View, To The Perspective Each Of Us Occupies When We Reflect On How To Live Without Knowing Exactly What We're Aiming For. To Answer Them, The Reflective Life Focuses On The Process Of Living One's Life From The Inside, Rather Than On Defining Goals From The Outside. Drawing On Traditional Philosophical Sources As Well As Literature And Recent Work In Social Psychology, Tiberius Argues That, To Live Well, We Need To Develop Reflective Wisdom: To Care About Things That Will Sustain Us And Give Us Good Experiences, To Have Perspective On Our Successes And Failures, And To Be Moderately Self-aware And Cautiously Optimistic About Human Nature. Further, We Need To Know When To Think About Our Values, Character, And Choices, And When Not To. A Crucial Part Of Wisdom, Tiberius Maintains, Is Being Able To Shift Perspectives: To Be Self-critical When We Are Prepared For It, But Not When It Will Undermine Our Success; To Be Realistic, But Not To The Extent That We Are Immobilized By The Harsh Facts Of Life; To Examine Life When Reflection Is Appropriate, But Not When We Should Lose Ourselves In Experience.
How can individuals navigate the complexities of life and make meaningful choices when faced with conflicting values and uncertain outcomes? Valerie Tiberius, a professor of philosophy, addresses this question by shifting the focus from external goal-setting to the internal process of living. She argues that the key to a well-lived life is the cultivation of reflective wisdom, which involves balancing self-awareness, perspective-shifting, and a realistic yet optimistic view of human nature.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and readers alike note that this work provides a sophisticated, nuanced approach to ethics that avoids the pitfalls of simplistic self-help literature. The prose is recognized for its academic rigor while remaining accessible to those interested in the practical application of philosophical inquiry to daily life.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2008-01-01
Publisher:
Ebsco Publishing
ISBN-10:
0191525243
ISBN-13:
9780191525247
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