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Overview

The scope of interest and reflection on virtue and the virtues is as wide and deep as the questions we can ask about what makes a moral agent’s life decent, or noble, or holy rather than cruel, or base, or sinful; or about the conditions of human character and circumstance that make for good relations between family members, friends, workers, fellow citizens, and strangers, and the sorts of conditions that do not. Clearly these questions will inevitably be directed to more finely grained features of everyday life in particular contexts. Virtue and the Moral Life: Theological and Philosophical Perspectives takes up these questions. In its ten timely and original chapters, it considers the specific importance of virtue ethics, its public significance for shaping a society’s common good, the value of civic integrity, warfare and returning soldiers’ sense of enlarged moral responsibility, the care for and agency of children in contemporary secular consumer society, and other questions involving moral failure, humility, and forgiveness.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739194522
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 04/15/2016
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 220
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

William Werpehowski holds the Robert L. McDevitt, K.S.G., K.C.H.S. and Catherine H. McDevitt L.C.H.S. Chair in Catholic Theology at Georgetown University. He is the author of Karl Barth and Christian Ethics: Living in Truth (2014) and American Protestant Ethics and the Legacy of H. Richard Niebuhr (2002).
Kathryn Getek Soltis is assistant professor of Christian ethics in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies and director of the Center for Peace and Justice Education at Villanova University.

Table of Contents

Preface

Part I: Why Virtue?
Chapter One: Seven Reasons for Doing Virtue Ethics Today
James F. Keenan, S.J.
Chapter Two: Augustine and the Liturgical Pedagogy of Virtue
Jennifer A. Herdt

Part II: Virtue, Conscience, and Public Life
Chapter Three: Historical Accountability and the Virtue of Civic Integrity
Margaret Urban Walker
Chapter Four: Moral Grief and Reflective Virtue
Mark A. Wilson

Part III: Virtue, Children, and the Family
Chapter Five: Children, Virtue Ethics, and Consumer Culture
Mary M. Doyle Roche
Chapter Six: Passing on the Faith in an Era of Rising ‘Nones’: Practicing Courage and Humility
Julie Hanlon Rubio

Part IV: Virtue and Moral Failure
Chapter Seven: Sin, Sickness, and Transgression: Medieval Perspectives on Sin and Their Significance Today
Jean Porter
Chapter Eight: Making More Space for Moral Failure
Lisa Tessman

Part V: Virtue and the Challenge of Otherness
Chapter Nine: Distinguishing Humility and Justice in Christian and Islamic Virtue
Jamie Schillinger
Chapter Ten: Human Corruption and the Possibility of Love: Dostoevskian Ruminations on Forgiveness
Edmund N. Santurri
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