Historicity, Contingency, and Virtue
The hermeneutical account of virtue and practical reasoning that I articulate takes its bearings from the Heideggerian notion of authenticity. This account, I argue, contributes a much-needed response to the aforementioned problem for virtue ethics, while also demonstrating Heidegger's relevance to ethics, particularly for the analytic tradition in which he has been little considered. After setting out the problem in chapter 1, I proceed to elucidate and defend Heidegger's account of the ontological structure of human life. This account, I argue, entails a conception of the authentic life that parallels and clarifies Aristotelian eudaimonia, and deepens our understanding of virtue ethical notions like practical wisdom and affective responsiveness.
The next few chapters consider the significance of a Gadamerian account of understanding, particularly how elements of our frameworks of understanding can be foregrounded and revised in ways that correct false presuppositions and issue in greater practical wisdom. Central to the process is a conception of dialogue that implies neither an escape from frameworks altogether nor the perpetuation of false ideologies.
Finally, I develop a theory of virtue that emerges from the foregoing discussion by extending and critically assessing the hermeneutical ethics of Charles Taylor. This theory distinguishes between (in my terms) 'transcendental' and 'immanent' virtues, a distinction that answers the initial worries by reconciling the thesis about the dependency of practical reason on conditioned frameworks with the philosophical ideals of critique, universality, and realism with respect to practical knowledge.
History
Date Modified
2017-06-05Defense Date
2011-03-10Research Director(s)
David SolomonCommittee Members
Fred Dallmayr Karl Ameriks Stephen WatsonDegree
- Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Level
- Doctoral Dissertation
Language
- English
Alternate Identifier
etd-04062011-162337Publisher
University of Notre DameAdditional Groups
- Philosophy
Program Name
- Philosophy