This interesting, careful and occasionally outrageous book explores the complex interaction and competition between the attitudes of affirmation and regret that are almost inevitable as we look back on our lives and celebrate of deplore the conditions and choices that have made us what we are - that underlie our successes and failures, and our personal attachments. R. Jay Wallace's aims are very broad and his conclusions radical, but he begins by examining closely several examples of the phenomenon, real and imaginary, that are already familiar from recent philosophical literature.

Thomas Nagel, London Review of Books

Must we always later regret actions that were wrong for us to perform at the time? Can there ever be good reason to affirm things in the past that we know were unfortunate? In this original work of moral philosophy, R. Jay Wallace shows that the standpoint from which we look back on our lives is shaped by our present attachments-to persons, to the projects that imbue our lives with meaning, and to life itself. Through a distinctive "affirmation dynamic", these attachments commit us to affirming the necessary conditions of their objects. The result is that we are sometimes unable to regret events and circumstances that were originally unjustified or otherwise somehow objectionable. Wallace traces these themes through a range of examples. A teenage girl makes an ill-advised decision to conceive a child - but her love for the child once it has been born makes it impossible for her to regret that earlier decision. The painter Paul Gauguin abandons his family to pursue his true artistic calling (and eventual life project) in Tahiti--which means he cannot truly regret his abdication of familial responsibility. The View from Here offers new interpretations of these classic cases, challenging their treatment by Bernard Williams and others. Another example is the "bourgeois predicament": we are committed to affirming the regrettable social inequalities that make possible the expensive activities that give our lives meaning. Generalizing from such situations, Wallace defends the view that our attachments inevitably commit us to affirming historical conditions that we cannot regard as worthy of being affirmed--a modest form of nihilism.
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The View from Here is a study of our must fundamental attitudes toward the past. The book explores the dynamics of affirmation and regret, tracing the connections of each to our ongoing attachments. The focus is on situations in which our attachments commit us to affirming events or decisions that we know to have been unfortunate or regrettable.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS ; Acknowledgments ; Chapter One: Introduction ; Chapter Two: Looking Backward (with Feeling) ; 2.1 "For Sorrow There is No Remedy." ; 2.2 Regret and Agency ; 2.3 Preferences about the Past ; 2.4 Regret and Affirmation ; Chapter Three: Affirming the Unacceptable ; 3.1 The Young Girl's Child ; 3.2 Affirmation and Justification ; 3.3 Mixed Feelings ; 3.4 Meaning, Disability, and Politics ; Chapter Four: Luck, Justification, and Moral Complaint ; 4.1 Williams' Gauguin ; 4.2 Affirming One's Life ; 4.3 Affirmation, Justification, and Morality ; 4.4 Deep and Shallow Ambivalence ; Chapter Five: The Bourgeois Predicament ; 5.1 Meaning and its Conditions ; 5.2 Obstacles to Affirmation ; 5.3 The Bourgeois Predicament ; 5.4 Redemption, Withdrawal, Denial ; Chapter Six: A Somewhat Pessimistic Conclusion
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199941353
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
408 gr
Høyde
211 mm
Bredde
145 mm
Dybde
31 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
282

Forfatter

Biographical note

R. Jay Wallace is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley. His publications include Responsibility and the Moral Sentiments (1994), Normativity and the Will (OUP, 2006), and numerous papers on moral psychology, the theory of practical reason, the philosophy of responsibility, and other topics in philosophical ethics.