Moral psychology Volume 5 Virtue and character 1st Edition by Walter Sinnott Armstrong, Christian Miller – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0262533189, 9780262321488
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0262533189
ISBN 13: 9780262321488
Author: Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Christian B. Miller
Philosophers have discussed virtue and character since Socrates, but many traditional views have been challenged by recent findings in psychology and neuroscience. This fifth volume of Moral Psychology grows out of this new wave of interdisciplinary work on virtue, vice, and character. It offers essays, commentaries, and replies by leading philosophers and scientists who explain and use empirical findings from psychology and neuroscience to illuminate virtue and character and related issues in moral philosophy. The contributors discuss such topics as eliminativist and situationist challenges to character; investigate the conceptual and empirical foundations of self-control, honesty, humility, and compassion; and consider whether the virtues contribute to well-being.
Contributors
Karl Aquino, Jason Baehr, C. Daniel Batson, Lorraine L. Besser, C. Daryl Cameron, Tanya L. Chartrand, M. J. Crockett, Bella DePaulo, Korrina A. Duffy, William Fleeson, Andrea L. Glenn, Charles Goodman, Geoffrey P. Goodwin, George Graham, June Gruber, Thomas Hurka, Eranda Jayawickreme, Andreas Kappes, Kristján Kristjánsson, Daniel Lapsley, Neil Levy, E.J. Masicampo, Joshua May, Christian B. Miller, M. A. Montgomery, Thomas Nadelhoffer, Eddy Nahmias, Hanna Pickard, Katie Rapier, Raul Saucedo, Shannon W. Schrader, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Nancy E. Snow, Gopal Sreenivasan, Chandra Sripada, June P. Tangney, Valerie Tiberius, Simine Vazire, Jennifer Cole Wright
Moral psychology Volume 5 Virtue and character 1st Table of contents:
1. Getting Cynical about Character: A Social-Psychological Perspective – C. Daniel Batson
1.1 Getting Less Cynical about Virtue – Joshua May
1.2 In Defense of (a Little) Moral Hypocrisy – Karl Aquino
1.3 Help Thou My Unbelief: A Reply to May and Aquino – C. Daniel Batson
2. Does Whole Trait Theory Work for the Virtues? – Eranda Jayawickreme, William Fleeson
2.1 Virtue Traits and Personality Traits – Lorraine L. Besser
2.2 Personality Is Not Destiny, but It’s Still Real – Simine Vazire
2.3 Whole Trait Theory Can Explain Virtues – Eranda Jayawickreme, William Fleeson
3. Character Education and the Rearguard of Situationism – Gopal Sreenivasan
3.1 Virtue, the Right, and the Good: Comment on Sreenivasan – Thomas Hurka
3.2 Situationism and the Pyrrhic Defense of Character Education: Commentary on Sreenivasan – Daniel Lapsley
3.3 Battlefields and Bogeymen: A Reply to Hurka and Lapsley – Gopal Sreenivasan
4. Of Marshmallows and Moderation – Neil Levy
4.1 Willpower as “Won’t”-power and the Challenges of Measuring Trait Self-Control – E. J. Masicampo
4.2 Serf-Control and Character – Chandra Sripada
4.3 Trading in the Trait? Response to Masicampo and Sripada – Neil Levy
5. Honesty – Christian B. Miller
5.1 Honesty’s Threshold – Jason Baehr
5.2 The Gift of Dishonesty – Bella M. DePaulo
5.3 Honesty Revisited: More Conceptual and Empirical Reflections – Christian B. Miller
6. The Twin Dimensions of the Virtue of Humility: Low Self-Focus and High Other-Focus – Thomas Nadelhoffer, Jennifer Cole Wright
6.1 Assessing Humility Is a Humbling Experience: Commentary on Nadelhoffer and Wright – Shannon W. Schrader, June P. Tangney
6.2 The Nature of Humility: A Critical Perspective on Nadelhoffer and Wright – Nancy E. Snow
6.3 Response to Schrader & Tangney and Snow Commentaries – Thomas Nadelhoffer, Jennifer Cole Wright
7. Compassion Is a Motivated Choice – C. Daryl Cameron, Katie Rapier
7.1 Compassion Is Not Always a Motivated Choice: A Multiple Decision Systems Perspective – M. A. Montgomery, Andreas Kappes, M. J. Crockett
7.2 Varieties of Compassion in Buddhist Philosophy: Comments on Cameron and Rapier – Charles Goodman
7.3 Response to Comments – C. Daryl Cameron, Katie Rapier
8. From Mimicry to Morality: The Role of Prosociality – Korrina A. Duffy, Tanya L. Chartrand
8.1 Prosociality Is Not Morality – Geoffrey P. Goodwin
8.2 The Dark Side of Mimicry: Comments on Duffy and Chartrand – Eddy Nahmias
8.3 Reply to Goodwin and Nahmias – Korrina A. Duffy, Tanya L. Chartrand
9. Personality Disorders and Character – Andrea L. Glenn
9.1 Sympathy, Identity, and the Psychology of Psychopathy and Moral Atrocities – Hanna Pickard
9.2 Psychopathy, Explanatory Pluralism, and Moral Responsibility – George Graham
9.3 Circumstances and Responsibility in Psychopathy: Replies to Pickard and Graham – Andrea L. Glenn
10. Does Virtue Make Us Happy? A New Theory for an Old Question – Valerie Tiberius
10.1 Who Does What? The Psychology-Philosophy Division of Labor on Virtue and Happiness – Raul Saucedo, June Gruber
10.2 A Tale of Two Default Approaches: Some Old Answers for a New Theory – Kristján Kristjánsson
10.3 On the Division of Labor between Philosophers and Psychologists: A “Goldilocksian” Reply to Comments from Saucedo & Gruber and Kristjánsson – Valerie Tiberius
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Walter Sinnott Armstrong,Christian Miller,psychology,Moral