Book contents
- Virtue and Meaning
- Virtue and Meaning
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Toward Re-Enchantment
- Chapter 1 The Human Form of Life
- Chapter 2 Virtue, Happiness, and Meaning
- Chapter 3 Other-Regarding Concern
- Chapter 4 Cosmic Outlooks
- Chapter 5 Homo Religiosus
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
Chapter 1 - The Human Form of Life
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 January 2020
- Virtue and Meaning
- Virtue and Meaning
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Toward Re-Enchantment
- Chapter 1 The Human Form of Life
- Chapter 2 Virtue, Happiness, and Meaning
- Chapter 3 Other-Regarding Concern
- Chapter 4 Cosmic Outlooks
- Chapter 5 Homo Religiosus
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
Summary
I seek to establish the claim that we are fundamentally and distinctively the meaning-seeking animal through an exploration of the engaged standpoint from within our human form of life, where it can be seen that our human form of life is shaped by “strong evaluative meaning,” that is, meaning or value that involves qualitative distinction (e.g., between higher and lower, noble and base, sacred and profane, etc.) and places normative demands upon us. I also show how this dimension of meaning is overlooked by the dominant neo-Aristotelian approach because of its emphasis on a disengaged standpoint on our human form of life rather than an engaged standpoint and, thus, it does not provide us with an adequate philosophical anthropology and along with this it does not provide us with an adequate account of our reasons for the life of virtue. Moreover, I seek to counter a disenchanting move made by such neo-Aristotelians that involves denying any special realm of obligation. There is such a realm, I argue, and it is the whole realm of strong evaluative meaning, which includes more than just the domain of “the moral” narrowly construed as concerned with what we owe to others.
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- Virtue and MeaningA Neo-Aristotelian Perspective, pp. 8 - 43Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020