Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- What's Morality Got to Do With It? Making the Right Distinctions
- Unauthorized Humanitarian Intervention
- Thinking Constitutionally: The Problem of Deliberative Democracy
- Representing Ignorance
- Dual Citizenship and American Democracy: Patriotism, National Attachment, and National Identity
- Policy Implications of Zero Discounting: An Exploration in Politics and Morality
- Reflections on Espionage
- Mr. Pinocchio Goes to Washington: Lying in Politics
- A Subject of Distaste; An Object of Judgment
- Against Civic Schooling
- Political Morality as Convention
- Autonomy and Empathy
- God's Image and Egalitarian Politics
- Should political Liberals Be Compassionate Conservatives? Philosophical Foundations of the Faith-Based Initiative
- Index
Autonomy and Empathy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- What's Morality Got to Do With It? Making the Right Distinctions
- Unauthorized Humanitarian Intervention
- Thinking Constitutionally: The Problem of Deliberative Democracy
- Representing Ignorance
- Dual Citizenship and American Democracy: Patriotism, National Attachment, and National Identity
- Policy Implications of Zero Discounting: An Exploration in Politics and Morality
- Reflections on Espionage
- Mr. Pinocchio Goes to Washington: Lying in Politics
- A Subject of Distaste; An Object of Judgment
- Against Civic Schooling
- Political Morality as Convention
- Autonomy and Empathy
- God's Image and Egalitarian Politics
- Should political Liberals Be Compassionate Conservatives? Philosophical Foundations of the Faith-Based Initiative
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
When Carol Gilligan, Nel Noddings, and other ethicists of caring draw the contrast between supposedly masculine and supposedly feminine moral thinking, they put such things as justice, autonomy, and rights together under the first rubric and such things as caring, responsibility for others, and connection together under the second. This division naturally leaves caring ethicists with the issue of how to deal with topics such as justice, autonomy, and rights, but it also leaves defenders of more traditional moral theories (now dubbed “masculine”) with the problem of how to treat (if at all) the sorts of issues that ethicists of caring raise.
One response, among caring ethicists and others, has been to acknowledge the two types of moral thinking (however imperfectly correlated with sex or gender) while claiming that each is one-sided and needs to be complemented or supplemented with the other if we are to achieve an adequate understanding of morality, of the full range of moral phenomena. This says, in effect, that previous “masculine” moral philosophies have skimped on (the importance of) the sorts of affective bonds on which caring ethics focuses. This response also suggests that caring and human connection need to be situated within just social institutions whose character is not determined by caring, but, rather, by the less personal and more general principles and concepts of traditional moral/political philosophy and its descendants.
However, some caring ethicists have proceeded more boldly.
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- Information
- Morality and Politics , pp. 293 - 309Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004