The Routledge handbook of love in philosophy
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Bibliographic Information
The Routledge handbook of love in philosophy
(Routledge handbooks)(Routledge handbooks in philosophy)
Routledge, 2019
- : hbk
Available at 10 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Routledge Handbook of Love in Philosophy collects 39 original chapters from prominent philosophers on the nature, meaning, value, and predicaments of love, presented in a unique framework that highlights the rich variety of methods and traditions used to engage with these subjects. This volume is structured around important realms of human life and activity, each of which receives its own section:
I. Family and Friendship
II. Romance and Sex
III. Politics and Society
IV. Animals, Nature, and the Environment
V. Art, Faith, and Meaning
VI. Rationality and Morality
VII. Traditions: Historical and Contemporary.
This last section includes chapters treating love as a subject in both Western and non-Western philosophical traditions. The contributions, all appearing in print here for the first time, are written to be accessible and compelling to non-philosophers and philosophers alike; and the volume as a whole encourages professional philosophers, teachers, students, and lay readers to rethink standard constructions of philosophical canons.
Table of Contents
Introduction, Adrienne M. Martin
Part I. Family and friendship
Love and friendship, Diane Jeske
Early Relationships, Pathologies of Attachment, and the Capacity to Love, Monique Wonderly
"Mama, do you love me? A defense of unloving parents," Sara Protasi
Loving and (or?) choosing our children: disability, unconditional parental love, and prenatal selection Joseph A. Stramondo
Part II. Romance and sex
Love, romance, and sex, Troy Jollimore
All Hearts in Love Use Their Own Tongues: Concepts, Verbal Disputes, and Disagreeing About Love, C.S.I Jenkins
The normative potency of sexually exclusive love, Jennifer Ryan Lockhart
Queer Bodies and Queer Love, Maren Behrensen
Plato on love and sex, Jeremy Reid
Eros and Agape in Interpersonal Relationships: Plato, Emerson, and Peirce, Daniel G. Campos
Threats, Warnings, and Relationship Ultimatums, Hallie Liberto
Part III. Politics and society
Love and marriage, Brook J. Sadler
Love, anger, and racial justice, Myisha Cherry
Love and political reconciliation, Colleen Murphy
The morning stars will sing together: compassion, nonviolence, and the revolution of the heart, Cheyney Ryan
Part IV. Animals, nature, and the environment
Love and animals: Simone Weil, Iris Murdoch and attention as love, Elise Aaltola
On the love of nature, Rick Anthony Furtak
Caring to be green: the importance of love for environmental integrity, Cheryl Hall
Part V. Art, faith, and meaning
Love and beauty in eighteenth-century aesthetics, Paul Guyer
Love songs, Noel Carroll
How faith secures the morality of love, Sharon Krishek
What is this thing called love?, Luc Bovens
Part VI. Rationality and morality
Reasons for love, Esther Engels Kroeker
Reasons of love, Katrian Schaubroeck
Love and agency, Kyla Ebels-Duggan
Love, practical reasons, and African philosophy, Sandy Koullas
Love and moral structures: how love can reshape ethical theory, J.L.A. Garcia
Moral normativity and the necessities of love, Harry Frankfurt
Love and hatred, Jens Haas and Katja Maria Vogt
Part VII. Traditions: Historical and Contemporary
The Confucian and Daoist traditions on love, David B. Wong
Love: India's distinctive moral theory, Shyam Ranganathan
Love in the Jewish tradition, Lenn E. Goodman
Love in Islamic philosophy, Ali Altaf Mian
Three models of Christian love: Platonic, Aristotelian, and Kantian, Eric. J. Silverman
European concepts of love in the 17th and 18th centuries, Gabor Boros
Love in 19th-century Western philosophy, Michael Strawser
(The varieties of) love in contemporary Anglophone philosophy, Benjamin Bagley
Love in contemporary psychology and neuroscience, Berit Brogaard
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