Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
This is a brave book, taking on a number of unthinkable topics with a human touch. Not only does Sami Pihlström make guilt the foundation stone of morality, but he rethinks guilt in such a way that none of us escape the experience, or should even want to, for to do so would be less than human. Writing on the borderline between philosophy and psychology, the author shows that guilt not only gives meaning to our lives, but that moral guilt is constantly endangered by ethical solipsism and nihilism. Sharing much with Emmanuel Levinas, Pihlström writes with a clarity and style quite remarkable for the philosophical depth and seriousness of the topic. -- C. Fred Alford, University of Maryland, College Park
In this imaginative study, Sami Pihlström argues that the human capacity to feel guilty is constitutive of the possibility of morality. Appropriating insights from Kant, Wittgenstein, Dostoevsky, and Levinas, he argues that guilt is not only an empirical concept but also a transcendental concept that structures ethical seriousness. Although transcendental guilt is related to the concept of original sin, it does not presuppose theological or religious beliefs. Pihlström probes the issues of ethical solipsism, our responsibility to others, and the meaning of life. A highly original, bold, and provocative approach to fundamental questions of morality. -- Richard J. Bernstein, Professor of Philosophy, New School for Social Research
Transcendental Guilt is a rigorous and gripping account of guilt as the moral emotion that is constitutive of the moral point of view. Drawing on the work of Kant, Wittgenstein, Levinas, Gaita, and the American pragmatists, Philstrom forges a compelling and provoking account of one's embeddedness in the 'metaphysically tragic nature of morality' where ethical seriousness demands that one recognize oneself as guilty in the face of the reality of the other. Transcendental Guilt is deeply personal and, at the same time, insightful and informative to the professional philosophical side of any reflective reader struggling to come to grips with the basis of human moral action in an at best difficult world. It is one of those rare books that shifts one's vision and reorients one's understanding of oneself as an ethical agent. -- Kathleen Wallace, Hofstra University

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Introduction: Moral Reflection and Ethical Theory Chapter 3 Chapter 2.Transcendental Guilt Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Guilt and Ethical Solipsism Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Ethical Unthinkabilities and Philosophical Seriousness Chapter 6 Chapter 5. A Meaningful Life in a Meaningless Cosmos? Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Constructing Moral Identity Chapter 8 Chapter 7. Concluding Reflections: Does Anyone Ever Do What Is the Right Thing to Do?

Transcendental Guilt Reflections on Ethical

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    A Hardback by Sami Pihlström

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      View other formats and editions of Transcendental Guilt Reflections on Ethical by Sami Pihlström

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 3/17/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739164365, 978-0739164365
      ISBN10: 0739164368

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      This is a brave book, taking on a number of unthinkable topics with a human touch. Not only does Sami Pihlström make guilt the foundation stone of morality, but he rethinks guilt in such a way that none of us escape the experience, or should even want to, for to do so would be less than human. Writing on the borderline between philosophy and psychology, the author shows that guilt not only gives meaning to our lives, but that moral guilt is constantly endangered by ethical solipsism and nihilism. Sharing much with Emmanuel Levinas, Pihlström writes with a clarity and style quite remarkable for the philosophical depth and seriousness of the topic. -- C. Fred Alford, University of Maryland, College Park
      In this imaginative study, Sami Pihlström argues that the human capacity to feel guilty is constitutive of the possibility of morality. Appropriating insights from Kant, Wittgenstein, Dostoevsky, and Levinas, he argues that guilt is not only an empirical concept but also a transcendental concept that structures ethical seriousness. Although transcendental guilt is related to the concept of original sin, it does not presuppose theological or religious beliefs. Pihlström probes the issues of ethical solipsism, our responsibility to others, and the meaning of life. A highly original, bold, and provocative approach to fundamental questions of morality. -- Richard J. Bernstein, Professor of Philosophy, New School for Social Research
      Transcendental Guilt is a rigorous and gripping account of guilt as the moral emotion that is constitutive of the moral point of view. Drawing on the work of Kant, Wittgenstein, Levinas, Gaita, and the American pragmatists, Philstrom forges a compelling and provoking account of one's embeddedness in the 'metaphysically tragic nature of morality' where ethical seriousness demands that one recognize oneself as guilty in the face of the reality of the other. Transcendental Guilt is deeply personal and, at the same time, insightful and informative to the professional philosophical side of any reflective reader struggling to come to grips with the basis of human moral action in an at best difficult world. It is one of those rare books that shifts one's vision and reorients one's understanding of oneself as an ethical agent. -- Kathleen Wallace, Hofstra University

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Introduction: Moral Reflection and Ethical Theory Chapter 3 Chapter 2.Transcendental Guilt Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Guilt and Ethical Solipsism Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Ethical Unthinkabilities and Philosophical Seriousness Chapter 6 Chapter 5. A Meaningful Life in a Meaningless Cosmos? Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Constructing Moral Identity Chapter 8 Chapter 7. Concluding Reflections: Does Anyone Ever Do What Is the Right Thing to Do?

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