How might political emotions contribute to the creation of a decent public sphere? Our societies are characterized by difference and contestation. Cultivating political emotions can appear counterproductive to stability and peace. But there is an increasing recognition that emotions can be harnessed to empower community cohesion and social justice – and new ideas about how our political emotions can foster a decent public sphere and overcome intolerance are urgently needed. In Political Emotions: Towards a Decent Public Sphere, leading theorists consider the limits and prospects of cultivating our emotions that support social justice. All examine this topic from a diversity of disciplinary perspectives breaking new ground and yielding new understandings. Issues explored include adaptive preferences, capabilities, civil religion, compassion, conscience, dignity, feminism, imagination, multicultural citizenship, perfectionism, political liberalism, public sentiments, sympathy and much more in a wide-ranging exploration of key themes in contemporary political philosophy – and Martha C. Nussbaum’s significant contributions to it in particular - that should be of interest to anyone working in these broad areas.
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How might political emotions contribute to the creation of a decent public sphere? But there is an increasing recognition that emotions can be harnessed to empower community cohesion and social justice – and new ideas about how our political emotions can foster a decent public sphere and overcome intolerance are urgently needed.
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Introduction.- Political Objectivity.- Envy as a Civic Emotion.- How the Body Is Involved in Moral and Cognitive Emotions.- Conscience and Context.- The Politics of Compassion.- Cultivating Citizenship: On the Importance of Stakeholding.- The Liberalism of Love.- Perfectionist Liberalism or Political Liberalism? How Might Amartya Sen Respond to Martha Nussbaum's Question?.- The “Transition” to Restorative Justice.- Reply.
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How might political emotions contribute to the creation of a decent public sphere? Our societies are characterized by difference and contestation. Cultivating political emotions can appear counterproductive to stability and peace. But there is an increasing recognition that emotions can be harnessed to empower community cohesion and social justice – and new ideas about how our political emotions can foster a decent public sphere and overcome intolerance are urgently needed. In Political Emotions: Towards a Decent Public Sphere, leading theorists consider the limits and prospects of cultivating our emotions that support social justice. All examine this topic from a diversity of disciplinary perspectives breaking new ground and yielding new understandings. Issues explored include adaptive preferences, capabilities, civil religion, compassion, conscience, dignity, feminism, imagination, multicultural citizenship, perfectionism, political liberalism, public sentiments, sympathy and muchmore in a wide-ranging exploration of key themes in contemporary political philosophy – and Martha C. Nussbaum’s significant contributions to it in particular - that should be of interest to anyone working in these broad areas.
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“When hate crime and furious ideological conflicts feature so much in the media, how timely and reassuring it is for philosophers to engage with the potentially positive aspects of emotion in political life! We tend to think of politics as being ideally a matter of impartial rationality, which emotion serves to vitiate, but these richly diverse essays ask in what ways emotions can in fact help, rather than hinder, our communality and cohesiveness. Envy, tolerance, compassion, love, anger, disgust – the ambivalences of these and other emotions, their possible contribution to the pursuit of social justice, the differences between their personal and their shared realizations, are incisively examined. The authors respond to some of the themes in Martha Nussbaum’s work on emotions and the final essay contains her own responses to each of them, adding further depth to a marvellous melange.” — Jane O’Grady, Co-founder and teacher at the London School of Philosophy, UK
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Features many leading thinkers Takes an interdisciplinary approach Addresses contemporary concerns
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783030910945
Publisert
2023-04-20
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
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Thom Brooks is Dean of Durham Law School and Professor of Law and Government. His books include The Global Justice Reader (2008), Punishment (2021, 2d), Hegel’s Political Philosophy (2013), Becoming British (2016), The Trust Factor (2021) and Rawls’s Political Liberalism (co-edited with Martha Nussbaum, 2015). Brooks advises the UK’s Labour Party and writes columns for the Daily Telegraph and Independent.