Shame And Necessity by Bernard Williams

An examination of ancient Greek moral thought and its implications for modern ethics, arguing that shame, honor, and social attachments are constitutive of moral life and cannot be reduced to impersonal rules or calculations; the work critiques consequentialist and Kantian frameworks for abstracting agents from their social and psychological conditions, defends the relevance of moral luck and personal integrity, and advocates a historically informed, pluralistic account of ethical judgment that takes emotions and social roles seriously.

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Published
1993
Nationality
British
Length
Unknown
Pages
Unknown
Original Language
English
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