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Moral Engines

Moral Engines

Cheryl Mattingly | Rasmus Dyring | Maria Louw | Thomas Schwarz Wentzer

(2017)

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Book Details

Abstract

In the past fifteen years, there has been a virtual explosion of anthropological literature arguing that morality should be considered central to human practice. Out of this explosion new and invigorating conversations have emerged between anthropologists and philosophers. Moral Engines: Exploring the Ethical Drives in Human Life includes essays from some of the foremost voices in the anthropology of morality, offering unique interdisciplinary conversations between anthropologists and philosophers about the moral engines of ethical life, addressing the question: What propels humans to act in light of ethical ideals?


Cheryl Mattingly is Professor of Anthropology at University of Southern California. She is a 2017 Guggenheim Fellow and has received numerous awards from the American Anthropological Association, including the Victor Turner Prize, the Stirling Prize and the New Millennium Prize. Her most recent book is Moral Laboratories: Family Peril and the Struggle for a Good Life (University of California Press 2014).


Rasmus Dyring is Assistant Professor at the Department of Philosophy and History of Ideas, Aarhus University. In dialogue with the anthropology of ethics, Dyring’s research aims at foregrounding the existential dimensions of ethical life. He has published several articles on this subject, for instance, “A Spectacle of Disappearance” (Tropos 2015).


Maria Louw is Associate Professor at the Department of Anthropology, Aarhus University. She is the author of Everyday Islam in Post-Soviet Central Asia (Routledge 2007) and a number of other publications focusing on religion, secularism, atheism and morality in Central Asia.


“This is an excellent collection of essays that contributes to the growing anthropological literature on morality and ethics. It addresses the current debates in a new and useful way.” · Johan Rasanayagam, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen

“This stimulating volume suggests a new metaphor to reshape this central question to moral theory within an anthropological perspective.” · Samuel Leze, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon


Thomas Schwarz Wentzer is Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Philosophy and History of Ideas, Aarhus University. He is author of Bewahrung der Geschichte: Die hermeneutische Philosophie Walter Benjamins (Philo-Verlag 2002), co-editor of Finite but Unbounded: New Approaches in Philosophical Anthropology (DeGruyter 2017).

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Moral Engines i
Contents v
Prologue 1
Chapter 1. The Question of ‘Moral Engines’ 9
Part I. Moral Engines and Human Experience 37
Chapter 2. Ethics, Immanent Transcendence and the Experimental Narrative Self 39
Chapter 3. Being Otherwise 61
Chapter 4. Haunting as Moral Engine 83
Chapter 5. Every Day 100
Chapter 6. The Provocation of Freedom 116
Part II. Moral Engines and ‘Moral Facts’ 135
Chapter 7. On the Immanence of Ethics 137
Chapter 8. Where in the World are Values? 155
Chapter 9. Fault Lines in the Anthropology of Ethics 174
Part III. Moral Engines and the Human Condition 195
Chapter 10. An Ethics of Dwelling and a Politics of Worldbuilding 197
Chapter 11. Human, the Responding Being 211
Chapter 12. The History of Responsibility 230
Index 251