Description

Book Synopsis
Dignity is humanity's most prized possession. We experience the loss of dignity as a terrible humiliation: when we lose our dignity we feel deprived of something without which life no longer seems worth living.

Trade Review
"An elegant and subtle exploration of dignity and what it means to lose it."
Nigel Warburton, author of A Little History of Philosophy

"Human Dignity shows a rich and insightful exploration of the idea of human dignity from various angles and at several levels. Bieri carefully distinguishes dignity from other similar looking but really quite different concepts and deals with such important questions as how to live and die with dignity. This is an important book."
Bhikhu Parekh, House of Lords

"An important and beautiful book, thoroughly worth reading."
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

Table of Contents
Introduction: Dignity as a way of living

1. Dignity as autonomy
Being a subject
Being an end in itself
Slaughterhouses
What if it is voluntary?
Humiliation as demonstrated powerlessness
Escaping to an inner fortress
Having rights
Being patronized
Caring paternalism
Respect for alterity and conviction
Dependence: asking and begging
Begging for feelings
Inner autonomy: thought
Inner autonomy: wanting and deciding
Inner autonomy: emotions
Inner autonomy: self-image and censorship
Humiliation through serfdom
Autonomy through self-knowledge
Needing therapy
Dignity through work
Money

2. Dignity as encounter
When subjects encounter each other
Commitment and distancing
Recognition
Equal rights
Putting someone on display
Sex objects
Human commodity
Neglect
Talk to me!
Laughing at someone
Denying explanation
Manipulation
Deception
Seduction
Overpowering
Working with a therapist
No pity, thank you!
Encounters between autonomous individuals
Leaving an open future to the other
Dignified partings

3. Dignity as respect for intimacy
The dual need for intimacy
Feeling the other’s gaze
What is a defect?
The logic of shame
Shame as humiliation
Dignity as conquered shame
The intimate space
The innermost zone
Dignified disclosures
Undignified disclosures
Shared intimacy
Betrayed intimacy as lost dignity
A challenge: Intimacy as a lack of courage

4. Dignity as truthfulness
Lying to others
Lying to oneself
Honesty and its limits
Calling things by their proper name
Saving one’s face
Bullshit

5. Dignity as self-respect
Dignity through limits
Fluid self-images
Destroying self-respect
Sacrificing self-respect
Breaking self-respect
Responsibility for oneself

6. Dignity as moral integrity
Moral autonomy
Moral dignity
Dignity in guilt and forgiveness
Punishment: Development instead of destruction
Absolute moral boundaries?

7. Dignity as a sense for what matters
Meaning of life
One’s own voice
Equanimity as a sense of proportion
The view from the end

8. Dignity as the acceptance of finitude
When others lose themselves
Escape
Losing oneself: Resistance
Losing oneself: Accepting the journey into darkness
Dying
Letting someone die
Ending one’s life
Responsibility towards the dead
References & Further Reading

Human Dignity

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    A Hardback by Peter Bieri, Diana Siclovan

    1 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Human Dignity by Peter Bieri

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 30/12/2016
      ISBN13: 9780745689012, 978-0745689012
      ISBN10: 0745689019

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Dignity is humanity's most prized possession. We experience the loss of dignity as a terrible humiliation: when we lose our dignity we feel deprived of something without which life no longer seems worth living.

      Trade Review
      "An elegant and subtle exploration of dignity and what it means to lose it."
      Nigel Warburton, author of A Little History of Philosophy

      "Human Dignity shows a rich and insightful exploration of the idea of human dignity from various angles and at several levels. Bieri carefully distinguishes dignity from other similar looking but really quite different concepts and deals with such important questions as how to live and die with dignity. This is an important book."
      Bhikhu Parekh, House of Lords

      "An important and beautiful book, thoroughly worth reading."
      Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Dignity as a way of living

      1. Dignity as autonomy
      Being a subject
      Being an end in itself
      Slaughterhouses
      What if it is voluntary?
      Humiliation as demonstrated powerlessness
      Escaping to an inner fortress
      Having rights
      Being patronized
      Caring paternalism
      Respect for alterity and conviction
      Dependence: asking and begging
      Begging for feelings
      Inner autonomy: thought
      Inner autonomy: wanting and deciding
      Inner autonomy: emotions
      Inner autonomy: self-image and censorship
      Humiliation through serfdom
      Autonomy through self-knowledge
      Needing therapy
      Dignity through work
      Money

      2. Dignity as encounter
      When subjects encounter each other
      Commitment and distancing
      Recognition
      Equal rights
      Putting someone on display
      Sex objects
      Human commodity
      Neglect
      Talk to me!
      Laughing at someone
      Denying explanation
      Manipulation
      Deception
      Seduction
      Overpowering
      Working with a therapist
      No pity, thank you!
      Encounters between autonomous individuals
      Leaving an open future to the other
      Dignified partings

      3. Dignity as respect for intimacy
      The dual need for intimacy
      Feeling the other’s gaze
      What is a defect?
      The logic of shame
      Shame as humiliation
      Dignity as conquered shame
      The intimate space
      The innermost zone
      Dignified disclosures
      Undignified disclosures
      Shared intimacy
      Betrayed intimacy as lost dignity
      A challenge: Intimacy as a lack of courage

      4. Dignity as truthfulness
      Lying to others
      Lying to oneself
      Honesty and its limits
      Calling things by their proper name
      Saving one’s face
      Bullshit

      5. Dignity as self-respect
      Dignity through limits
      Fluid self-images
      Destroying self-respect
      Sacrificing self-respect
      Breaking self-respect
      Responsibility for oneself

      6. Dignity as moral integrity
      Moral autonomy
      Moral dignity
      Dignity in guilt and forgiveness
      Punishment: Development instead of destruction
      Absolute moral boundaries?

      7. Dignity as a sense for what matters
      Meaning of life
      One’s own voice
      Equanimity as a sense of proportion
      The view from the end

      8. Dignity as the acceptance of finitude
      When others lose themselves
      Escape
      Losing oneself: Resistance
      Losing oneself: Accepting the journey into darkness
      Dying
      Letting someone die
      Ending one’s life
      Responsibility towards the dead
      References & Further Reading

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