Ethical autonomy: the rise of self-rule
"Autonomy is a towering concept in human affairs. Its "evocative force" pulses through the discourse of classical antiquity, rising in present times and proliferating across the globe. Vital to social-scientific and philosophical understanding, autonomy stands prominently in the panth...
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Oxford University Press
[2020]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "Autonomy is a towering concept in human affairs. Its "evocative force" pulses through the discourse of classical antiquity, rising in present times and proliferating across the globe. Vital to social-scientific and philosophical understanding, autonomy stands prominently in the pantheon of democratic values, celebrated together with the basic liberties, justice, equality, toleration, and the rule of law. Autonomy is a mainstay of individual freedom and the lifeblood of democratic conceptions of citizenship. Many believe that personal autonomy promotes individuality and authenticity, empowering citizens and spurring positive social change. Various scholars occupy themselves with the question of how to facilitate or to increase personal autonomy in democratic polities. Some ask what liberal government can do to advance personal autonomy, through schooling and other educational measures, in order to enhance people's pursuits or to energize political participation. Others go so far as to propose that personal autonomy is a basic human right, one generating moral and legal entitlements around the world. Numerous advocates have assumed that personal autonomy fits snugly with other important moral and political values. Some presuppose a natural compatibility between personal autonomy and superior ethical agency, reckoning that the more autonomous someone is, the better morally that person will be. Others intimate, or declare outright, that it is decidedly deficient not to be autonomous at the personal level. These views are fabricated from the positive qualities of autonomy, with proponents assuming, even defining, autonomous people as basically moral actors.The rosy notions and happy assumptions about autonomy are dangerous mistakes. Not only do many personally autonomous individuals take form as very bad actors: numerous of them are terrible miscreants who commit despicable, even monstrous acts. Some autonomous individuals torture, rape, and murder people they encounter. Others are deeply wicked and depraved in other ways. Personally autonomous individuals come in many dreadful varieties, from degenerate malefactors to perpetrators of horrific evil. The jumble includes those who unburden themselves of emotional and volitional constraints, preparing themselves for shocking acts. And the mix features individuals who labor thirstily to generate options to do evil, or who mull over depraved choices that appear within their perimeters. These are people whose autonomy produces a number of difficult philosophical and practical conundrums for moral and political theory, for liberalism, and for citizenship in democratic political orders. Many personally autonomous individuals are upstanding citizens and fine people, but there are legion who are not. |
Beschreibung: | XX, 225 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9780190087647 |
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520 | 3 | |a "Autonomy is a towering concept in human affairs. Its "evocative force" pulses through the discourse of classical antiquity, rising in present times and proliferating across the globe. Vital to social-scientific and philosophical understanding, autonomy stands prominently in the pantheon of democratic values, celebrated together with the basic liberties, justice, equality, toleration, and the rule of law. Autonomy is a mainstay of individual freedom and the lifeblood of democratic conceptions of citizenship. Many believe that personal autonomy promotes individuality and authenticity, empowering citizens and spurring positive social change. Various scholars occupy themselves with the question of how to facilitate or to increase personal autonomy in democratic polities. Some ask what liberal government can do to advance personal autonomy, through schooling and other educational measures, in order to enhance people's pursuits or to energize political participation. | |
520 | 3 | |a Others go so far as to propose that personal autonomy is a basic human right, one generating moral and legal entitlements around the world. Numerous advocates have assumed that personal autonomy fits snugly with other important moral and political values. Some presuppose a natural compatibility between personal autonomy and superior ethical agency, reckoning that the more autonomous someone is, the better morally that person will be. Others intimate, or declare outright, that it is decidedly deficient not to be autonomous at the personal level. These views are fabricated from the positive qualities of autonomy, with proponents assuming, even defining, autonomous people as basically moral actors.The rosy notions and happy assumptions about autonomy are dangerous mistakes. Not only do many personally autonomous individuals take form as very bad actors: numerous of them are terrible miscreants who commit despicable, even monstrous acts. | |
520 | 3 | |a Some autonomous individuals torture, rape, and murder people they encounter. Others are deeply wicked and depraved in other ways. Personally autonomous individuals come in many dreadful varieties, from degenerate malefactors to perpetrators of horrific evil. The jumble includes those who unburden themselves of emotional and volitional constraints, preparing themselves for shocking acts. And the mix features individuals who labor thirstily to generate options to do evil, or who mull over depraved choices that appear within their perimeters. These are people whose autonomy produces a number of difficult philosophical and practical conundrums for moral and political theory, for liberalism, and for citizenship in democratic political orders. Many personally autonomous individuals are upstanding citizens and fine people, but there are legion who are not. | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS Acknowledgments ix Introduction xiii S THE EVOLUTION OF AUTONOMY 1 l.l The Origins of Autonomy 2 1.2 AUTONOMIA AT THE INDIVIDUAL LEVEL 6 1.3 The Historical Development 1.4 Autonomy 1.5 Democracy of for Individual and the Autonomy 12 Persons 21 Proliferation of Autonomy 26 THE IDEA OF PERSONAL AUTONOMY 33 2.1 Autonomy 2.2 Personal Autonomy as as Individual 2.3 Alternative Understandings 2.4 Autonomy as Self-Rule 37 of Self-Rule 41 Personal Autonomy 60 Self-Rule: Its Conceptual Preferability 67 2.5 Personal Autonomy, Freedom, 2.6 Four Grounds for and Social Control 72 Valuing Personal Autonomy 84 CRITIQUE OF PERSONAL AUTONOMY 91 3.1 Standing Criticisms of 3.2 Personal Autonomy Personal Autonomy 92 as a Partisan Ideal 100
viii · CONTENTS 3.3 The Idea of 3.4 Cogitating 3.5 The Will to an Extreme Action 108 on Extreme Actions 111 Perform Extreme Actions 120 3.6 Formation Capabilities 126 of 3.7 The Generation of 3.8 Four Objections Options 140 and Replies 143 ETHICAL AUTONOMY 153 4.1 The Idea of Ethical Autonomy 154 4.2 Moral Character: Its Nature 4.3 The Distinctiveness 4.4 Is Ethical Autonomy 4.5 Ethical Autonomy a 160 Comprehensive Doctrine? 181 and the 4.6 Citizenship and Importance Ethical Autonomy 176 of Affirmation and of Difference 187 Education 193 4.7 Reciprocity 202 4.8 Three Objections and Replies 208 CONCLUSION 217 Index 221
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adam_txt |
CONTENTS Acknowledgments ix Introduction xiii S THE EVOLUTION OF AUTONOMY 1 l.l The Origins of Autonomy 2 1.2 AUTONOMIA AT THE INDIVIDUAL LEVEL 6 1.3 The Historical Development 1.4 Autonomy 1.5 Democracy of for Individual and the Autonomy 12 Persons 21 Proliferation of Autonomy 26 THE IDEA OF PERSONAL AUTONOMY 33 2.1 Autonomy 2.2 Personal Autonomy as as Individual 2.3 Alternative Understandings 2.4 Autonomy as Self-Rule 37 of Self-Rule 41 Personal Autonomy 60 Self-Rule: Its Conceptual Preferability 67 2.5 Personal Autonomy, Freedom, 2.6 Four Grounds for and Social Control 72 Valuing Personal Autonomy 84 CRITIQUE OF PERSONAL AUTONOMY 91 3.1 Standing Criticisms of 3.2 Personal Autonomy Personal Autonomy 92 as a Partisan Ideal 100
viii · CONTENTS 3.3 The Idea of 3.4 Cogitating 3.5 The Will to an Extreme Action 108 on Extreme Actions 111 Perform Extreme Actions 120 3.6 Formation Capabilities 126 of 3.7 The Generation of 3.8 Four Objections Options 140 and Replies 143 ETHICAL AUTONOMY 153 4.1 The Idea of Ethical Autonomy 154 4.2 Moral Character: Its Nature 4.3 The Distinctiveness 4.4 Is Ethical Autonomy 4.5 Ethical Autonomy a 160 Comprehensive Doctrine? 181 and the 4.6 Citizenship and Importance Ethical Autonomy 176 of Affirmation and of Difference 187 Education 193 4.7 Reciprocity 202 4.8 Three Objections and Replies 208 CONCLUSION 217 Index 221 |
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spelling | Swaine, Lucas 1969- Verfasser (DE-588)1146809239 aut Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule Lucas Swaine New York Oxford University Press [2020] XX, 225 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier "Autonomy is a towering concept in human affairs. Its "evocative force" pulses through the discourse of classical antiquity, rising in present times and proliferating across the globe. Vital to social-scientific and philosophical understanding, autonomy stands prominently in the pantheon of democratic values, celebrated together with the basic liberties, justice, equality, toleration, and the rule of law. Autonomy is a mainstay of individual freedom and the lifeblood of democratic conceptions of citizenship. Many believe that personal autonomy promotes individuality and authenticity, empowering citizens and spurring positive social change. Various scholars occupy themselves with the question of how to facilitate or to increase personal autonomy in democratic polities. Some ask what liberal government can do to advance personal autonomy, through schooling and other educational measures, in order to enhance people's pursuits or to energize political participation. Others go so far as to propose that personal autonomy is a basic human right, one generating moral and legal entitlements around the world. Numerous advocates have assumed that personal autonomy fits snugly with other important moral and political values. Some presuppose a natural compatibility between personal autonomy and superior ethical agency, reckoning that the more autonomous someone is, the better morally that person will be. Others intimate, or declare outright, that it is decidedly deficient not to be autonomous at the personal level. These views are fabricated from the positive qualities of autonomy, with proponents assuming, even defining, autonomous people as basically moral actors.The rosy notions and happy assumptions about autonomy are dangerous mistakes. Not only do many personally autonomous individuals take form as very bad actors: numerous of them are terrible miscreants who commit despicable, even monstrous acts. Some autonomous individuals torture, rape, and murder people they encounter. Others are deeply wicked and depraved in other ways. Personally autonomous individuals come in many dreadful varieties, from degenerate malefactors to perpetrators of horrific evil. The jumble includes those who unburden themselves of emotional and volitional constraints, preparing themselves for shocking acts. And the mix features individuals who labor thirstily to generate options to do evil, or who mull over depraved choices that appear within their perimeters. These are people whose autonomy produces a number of difficult philosophical and practical conundrums for moral and political theory, for liberalism, and for citizenship in democratic political orders. Many personally autonomous individuals are upstanding citizens and fine people, but there are legion who are not. Autonomie (DE-588)4003974-2 gnd rswk-swf Person (DE-588)4134819-9 gnd rswk-swf Ethik (DE-588)4015602-3 gnd rswk-swf Autonomy (Philosophy) Citizenship / Moral and ethical aspects Individualism / Moral and ethical aspects Liberalism / Moral and ethical aspects Liberty of conscience Autonomie (DE-588)4003974-2 s Person (DE-588)4134819-9 s Ethik (DE-588)4015602-3 s DE-604 Online version Swaine, Lucas Ethical autonomy New York : Oxford University Press, 2020 9780190087654 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032102596&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Swaine, Lucas 1969- Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule Autonomie (DE-588)4003974-2 gnd Person (DE-588)4134819-9 gnd Ethik (DE-588)4015602-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4003974-2 (DE-588)4134819-9 (DE-588)4015602-3 |
title | Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule |
title_auth | Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule |
title_exact_search | Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule |
title_exact_search_txtP | Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule |
title_full | Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule Lucas Swaine |
title_fullStr | Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule Lucas Swaine |
title_full_unstemmed | Ethical autonomy the rise of self-rule Lucas Swaine |
title_short | Ethical autonomy |
title_sort | ethical autonomy the rise of self rule |
title_sub | the rise of self-rule |
topic | Autonomie (DE-588)4003974-2 gnd Person (DE-588)4134819-9 gnd Ethik (DE-588)4015602-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Autonomie Person Ethik |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032102596&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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