Description

Book Synopsis
This book investigates the pronounced enthusiasm that many traditions display for codes of ethics characterised by a multitude of rules. Recent anthropological interest in ethics and historical explorations of ‘self-fashioning’ have led to extensive study of the virtuous self, but existing scholarship tends to pass over the kind of morality that involves legalistic reasoning. Rules and ethics corrects that omission by demonstrating the importance of rules in everyday moral life in a variety of contexts. In a nutshell, it argues that legalistic moral rules are not necessarily an obstruction to a rounded ethical self, but can be an integral part of it. An extended introduction first sets out the theoretical basis for studies of ethical systems that are characterised by detailed rules. This is followed by a series of empirical studies of rule-oriented moral traditions in a comparative perspective.

Table of Contents

Introduction: rules and ethics – Morgan Clarke and Emily Corran
Part I: Rules enabling moral life
1 Conscience is tradition: classical Hindu law and the ethics of conservatism – Donald R. Davis, Jr.
2 Manners and morals: codes of civility in early modern England – Martin Ingram
3 Control of the self and the casuistry of vows: Christian personal conscience and clerical intervention in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries – Emily Corran
Part II: Rules and virtue
4 Rules and the unruly: Roman exemplary ethics – Rebecca Langlands
5 ‘For the love of God’? The First Commandment and sacramental confession in early modern Catholic Europe – Nicole Reinhardt
6 Counting good and bad deeds under military rule: Islam and divine bookkeeping in Nablus (Palestine) – Emanuel Schaeublin
Part III: Rules about rules
7 Tactics of transformation: self-formation and the multiplicity of authority in Polish conversions to Judaism – Jan Lorenz
8 Conscience and action in the Islamic madhhab-law tradition – Talal Al-Azem
9 Comparing casuistries: rules, rigour and relaxation in Islam and Christianity – Morgan Clarke
Afterword – James Laidlaw
Index

Rules and Ethics: Perspectives from Anthropology

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    A Hardback by Morgan Clarke, Emily Corran

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      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 10/08/2021
      ISBN13: 9781526148902, 978-1526148902
      ISBN10: 1526148900

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book investigates the pronounced enthusiasm that many traditions display for codes of ethics characterised by a multitude of rules. Recent anthropological interest in ethics and historical explorations of ‘self-fashioning’ have led to extensive study of the virtuous self, but existing scholarship tends to pass over the kind of morality that involves legalistic reasoning. Rules and ethics corrects that omission by demonstrating the importance of rules in everyday moral life in a variety of contexts. In a nutshell, it argues that legalistic moral rules are not necessarily an obstruction to a rounded ethical self, but can be an integral part of it. An extended introduction first sets out the theoretical basis for studies of ethical systems that are characterised by detailed rules. This is followed by a series of empirical studies of rule-oriented moral traditions in a comparative perspective.

      Table of Contents

      Introduction: rules and ethics – Morgan Clarke and Emily Corran
      Part I: Rules enabling moral life
      1 Conscience is tradition: classical Hindu law and the ethics of conservatism – Donald R. Davis, Jr.
      2 Manners and morals: codes of civility in early modern England – Martin Ingram
      3 Control of the self and the casuistry of vows: Christian personal conscience and clerical intervention in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries – Emily Corran
      Part II: Rules and virtue
      4 Rules and the unruly: Roman exemplary ethics – Rebecca Langlands
      5 ‘For the love of God’? The First Commandment and sacramental confession in early modern Catholic Europe – Nicole Reinhardt
      6 Counting good and bad deeds under military rule: Islam and divine bookkeeping in Nablus (Palestine) – Emanuel Schaeublin
      Part III: Rules about rules
      7 Tactics of transformation: self-formation and the multiplicity of authority in Polish conversions to Judaism – Jan Lorenz
      8 Conscience and action in the Islamic madhhab-law tradition – Talal Al-Azem
      9 Comparing casuistries: rules, rigour and relaxation in Islam and Christianity – Morgan Clarke
      Afterword – James Laidlaw
      Index

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