The Feeling of Inequality is an engaging and timely treatment of a much-neglected issue: the emotional dimensions of inequality. It addresses both the felt dimensions of inequality and how emotions can produce and maintain inequality. The book's clear and non-technical prose make it accessible to a wide audience: philosophers, political theorists, and sociologists will find it indispensable.

Frederick Neuhouser, Barnard College, Columbia University

Try to imagine a work that combines moral and political psychology, political philosophy, history of philosophy (especially Hume and Adam Smith), and cognitive science and then mixes social theory and analytic philosophy with feminism and a light dose of literature. Even if you think you can, until you read Martin Hartmann's The Feeling of Inequality, you can't conceive of such intellectual alchemy. Hartmann's erudition is always functional: his is a penetrating and lively study of conceptualizing living in a greatly unequal society-our own-nominally committed to equality. While the analysis is sober, every page is enlivened by a quiet dagger aimed at the reader's intellectual and moral complacency. This is a major study in relational equality, and democratic theory.

Eric Schliesser, Professor of Political Theory, University of Amsterdam

How does socio-economic inequality affect our ability to relate to each other on emotional and intellectual levels? To date, public discourse on the rising level of inequality in many Western nations has been informed by quantifiable terms such as income and capital. Philosophical approaches, conversely, tend to focus on distributional aspects such as welfare, resources, and opportunities. In The Feeling of Inequality, author Martin Hartmann argues that the impact of inequality far transcends the material, highlighting the ways in which the emotional aspects of these disparities serve as engines of social differentiation. Reinterpreting David Hume's and Adam Smith's respective theories of sympathy, Hartmann sketches a relational theory of democracy that construes equality as a social relationship, placing particular emphasis on the emotions and attitudes that often accompany inequality such as contempt, envy, shame, esteem, pride, and admiration. Hartmann then localizes these 'relative' emotions in social and cultural practices, illustrating the ways in which these emotions result in concrete manifestations of inequality. By breaking down the foundations of the various empathy gulfs plaguing contemporary democratic societies, Hartmann paves the way for a more compassionate approach to thinking about inequality.
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The Feeling of Inequality shows how inequality reaches far beyond quantifiable differences in income or capital and considers how widespread socio-economic inequalities affect our ability to relate to each other emotionally and intellectually.
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Introduction: Toward a Relational Democratic Equality Part One: Empathy and Empathy Gulfs 1. Empathy as Non-Moral Psychological Mechanism 2. Against Empathy: Criticizing the Critiques 3. The Role of Imagination 4. Empathy Gulfs Part Two: Agents of Differentiation: Hume's Account of Positional Feelings 5. Sympathy and Imagination 6. The Principle of Comparison and the Peculiar Self 7. Does the Comparative Urge Disrupt Sympathy? 8. Masters, Servants, and Relational Proximities of Power Part Three:
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"The Feeling of Inequality is an engaging and timely treatment of a much-neglected issue: the emotional dimensions of inequality. It addresses both the felt dimensions of inequality and how emotions can produce and maintain inequality. The book's clear and non-technical prose make it accessible to a wide audience: philosophers, political theorists, and sociologists will find it indispensable." -- Frederick Neuhouser, Barnard College, Columbia University "Try to imagine a work that combines moral and political psychology, political philosophy, history of philosophy (especially Hume and Adam Smith), and cognitive science and then mixes social theory and analytic philosophy with feminism and a light dose of literature. Even if you think you can, until you read Martin Hartmann's The Feeling of Inequality, you can't conceive of such intellectual alchemy. Hartmann's erudition is always functional: his is a penetrating and lively study of conceptualizing living in a greatly unequal society-our own-nominally committed to equality. While the analysis is sober, every page is enlivened by a quiet dagger aimed at the reader's intellectual and moral complacency. This is a major study in relational equality, and democratic theory." -- Eric Schliesser, Professor of Political Theory, University of Amsterdam
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Martin Hartmann is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Lucerne. He received a PhD in Philosophy from Goethe University Frankfurt.
Selling point: Presents new interpretations of David Hume's and Adam Smith's theories of sympathy Selling point: Makes an important qualitative contribution to the many quantitative studies on inequality Selling point: Analyzes various forms of polarization affecting contemporary society
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780197500866
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
585 gr
Høyde
162 mm
Bredde
237 mm
Dybde
27 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
304

Forfatter

Biographical note

Martin Hartmann is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Lucerne. He received a PhD in Philosophy from Goethe University Frankfurt.