The concept of humility has venerable philosophical roots. For instance, Socrates' unparalleled wisdom is exhibited primarily through the recognition of his own ignorance-that is, through his epistemic humility. Humility, whether understood epistemically or morally, has been widely regarded as an important virtue across various philosophical traditions. However, not all scholars and philosophers agree that humility is virtuous, or even that it is a sign of wisdom. Some instead assert that humility involves a misjudgement or an underestimation of oneself, even claiming it impedes the pursuit of excellence.
In a timely, pioneering collection of chapters and reflections, Humility: A History examines the shifting conceptions and appraisals of humility across philosophical history from Plato to present-day. The essays in this volume examine important questions about humility: Is it a virtue? If yes, is it moral, epistemic, or both? How does it relate to modesty and shame? Is it paradoxical to ascribe humility to oneself, and if so, why? What is its role in politics, culture, and contemporary society?
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Humility: A History, a collection of original chapters and reflections, explores the ethical, political, and philosophical implications of humility. Drawing on historical analyses of humility from Plato to the present, the new essays gathered in this volume pose timely questions about virtue, disagreement, and tolerance.
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Justin Steinberg: Introduction 1: Iakovos Vasiliou: Platoâs Socrates and Humility 2: Jingyi Jenny Zhao: Humility: Ancient Chinese and Greek Perspectives 3: Sarah Byers: Augustineâs âHumilityâ: Neither âMonkishâ nor Monosemantic 4: Atif Khalil: Humility, Self-Naughting, and Self-Transcendence: A View from the Islamic Mystical Tradition 5: Lauren Mancia: Seeking Unworthiness, Self-Knowledge, and Truth: Humility in the Medieval Monastic Tradition of the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries 6: Martin Pickavé: Humility in Later Medieval Philosophy 7: John Christian Laursen: Skepticism, Humility, and a Limited Defense of Religious Toleration in Montaigne 8: Julie Walsh and Eric Stencil: âSay not that you are a light unto yourselfâ: Seventeenth-Century Conceptions of Humility in Epistemology, Ethics, and Politics 9: Sanem Soyarslan: Spinozaâs Changing Views on Humility Explored through a Cartesian Lens 10: Lauren Kopajtic: The Eyes of Others: Hume and Smith on Humility and Qualities of Reserve 11: Mark Alfano: Nietzsche on Humility and Modesty 12: Michael L Morgan: Humility and Modern Jewish Philosophy 13: Chike Jeffers: Black Pride and Humility 14: Nancy E. Snow: Humility, Moral Exemplarism, and Moral Goodness
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Justin Steinberg is Professor of Philosophy at Cornell University. He is the author of Spinoza's Political Psychology: The Taming of Fortune and Fear (Cambridge, 2018), the co-author of Spinoza (Polity, 2020), and the co-editor of the forthcoming Cambridge Spinoza Lexicon volume.
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Selling point: Explores the ontological and philosophical roots of humility through a fresh epistemic lens
Selling point: Reveals enduring challenges and inquiries about humility's ethical, moral, and philosophical implications
Selling point: Analyzes the historical origins of humility's meaning and role in western moral philosophy
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197778159
Publisert
2026
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
458 gr
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
142 mm
Dybde
33 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
440
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