How Long to Read The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development

By Marta Jimenez

How Long Does it Take to Read The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development?

It takes the average reader 6 hours and 40 minutes to read The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development by Marta Jimenez

Assuming a reading speed of 250 words per minute. Learn more

Description

Aristotle famously claims that we become virtuous by performing virtuous actions. He also recognizes the potential puzzle this claim gives rise to: How can we perform virtuous actions unless we are already virtuous? After all, virtuous actions require virtuous motives -- they are performed "for the sake of the noble" -- and virtuous motives characteristically belong to virtuous people. Many modern commentators presume that Aristotle's solution rests upon characterizing the actions of learners as actions that are the right things to do in the circumstances but are not done with virtuous motivation. But this leaves Aristotle with the problem of bridging what I call "the moral upbringing gap" -- i.e. the gap between the motivationally-neutral actions of learners and the dispositions to act reliably from a virtuous motive that such actions are supposed to produce. This gap emerges because, as I explain in Chapter One, the weaker the link between the way in which the actions of learners are performed and the way in which virtuous actions are done by virtuous agents, the more difficult it will be to understand how the repeated performance of the learners' actions produce genuinely virtuous dispositions.In Chapter Four I offer a criticism of the most frequently adopted explanation of the role of shame in moral upbringing, the pleasure-based approach, which understands shame in terms of enjoyment of the noble and makes pleasure the guiding mechanism for virtue acquisition: Virtuous actions become desirable for the learners because the learners come to take pleasure in such actions. Against this view, I argue that Aristotle regards taking pleasure in virtuous actions as a consequence, and not the source, of love for noble actions.The crucial role played by shame is further defended in Chapter Five, where I argue that Aristotle sees shame not as mere fear of external disapproval (as in the traditional view), nor as mere tendency to find pleasure in the noble (as in modern pleasure-based interpretations), but as genuine love of noble things and hatred of shameful ones. Understood this way, shame provides learners with the sort of motivation that allows them to perform genuinely virtuous actions before they have acquired practical wisdom and the stable dispositions characteristic of virtuous agents. Shame thus bridges the "moral upbringing gap" by providing the kind of motivation that, when entrenched by understanding, constitutes moral virtue.In Chapters Two and Three, I seek to shed light on what is required to bridge the moral upbringing gap by examining the relationship between several kinds of apparently virtuous actions and the corresponding virtuous dispositions. By examining what is lacking in each case of pseudo-courage discussed in NE 3.8, I construct an account of what Aristotle thinks the actions of learners must be like if these actions are to lead to genuine courage. I conclude that such actions must be performed from a virtuous motive, whose presence however neither requires nor guarantees that the agent is already virtuous. Shame is thus revealed as crucial to solving our initial puzzle about moral development.

How long is The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development?

The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development by Marta Jimenez is 388 pages long, and a total of 100,104 words.

This makes it 131% the length of the average book. It also has 122% more words than the average book.

How Long Does it Take to Read The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development Aloud?

The average oral reading speed is 183 words per minute. This means it takes 9 hours and 7 minutes to read The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development aloud.

What Reading Level is The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development?

The Virtues of Shame: Aristotle on the Positive Role of Shame in Moral Development is suitable for students ages 12 and up.

Note that there may be other factors that effect this rating besides length that are not factored in on this page. This may include things like complex language or sensitive topics not suitable for students of certain ages.

When deciding what to show young students always use your best judgement and consult a professional.

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