Friendship : a central moral value
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Friendship : a central moral value
(Value inquiry book series, v. 239)
Rodopi, c2012
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [227]-229) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Friendship was recognized as a central moral value in the classical period, but it was dismissed from medieval, modern, and twentieth century moral theories. This book argues that this dismissal is unjustifiable. The validity of this claim is established in four steps. First, it proposes the concept of moral paradigm. This concept enables us to explore the source of moral value and to provide a criterion for the evaluation of the adequacy of moral theory. Second, the book explains why medieval, modern and twentieth century moral theorists neglected friendship as a central moral value in their analysis of moral behavior and why this neglect was unjustifiable. Third, it explains why the classical moral philosophers viewed friendship as a central moral value. Fourth, it argues that friendship is an ontological need, therefore, a necessary condition of the moral life. This need is implicitly recognized in the moral paradigms that underlie the moral theories of the medieval, modern, and twentieth century moral theories. Accordingly it cannot be neglected in the process of moral theorizing.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Thesis and Plan of the Book
Concept of Moral Paradigm
Moral Paradigms in Hellenic and Hellenistic Cultures
Friendship in Hellenic and Hellenistic Moral Theory
Friendship in Medieval Moral Theory
Friendship in Modern Moral Theory
Friendship in Contemporary Moral Theory
Friendship as an Ontological Need
Notes
About The Author
Works Cited
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"