The Sage's Psychology: Confucianism Naturalized

<p>In this dissertation, I attempt to answer the question of how people can come to behave in accordance with their moral standards. To answer this question, I argue for and then apply a naturalistic approach to ethical philosophy that includes an attempt to construct both an empirically adeq...

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Main Author: Stephens, Daniel
Other Authors: Wong, David
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/9958
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-99582015-10-26T03:27:26ZThe Sage's Psychology: Confucianism NaturalizedStephens, DanielPhilosophyEthicsPsychology<p>In this dissertation, I attempt to answer the question of how people can come to behave in accordance with their moral standards. To answer this question, I argue for and then apply a naturalistic approach to ethical philosophy that includes an attempt to construct both an empirically adequate account of human psychology and an account of moral cultivation that accords with that account of our psychology. I then present a part of that picture of human psychology, focused on what I call "impediments to virtue", which are the elements of human psychology that make it difficult for us to behave in ways that consistently accord with our moral standards; this picture also serves to show why we need moral cultivation methods and helps to clarify what we need them to do for us. I then argue in favor of an interpretation of the Analects of Confucius on which it is primarily focused on discussions of a method of moral cultivation, and I lay out a detailed account of what that method is and how it works. Turning once again to literature in empirical psychology, I present an argument that we have good reason to think that the Confucian method of moral cultivation as presented in the Analects will be effective in the ways intended. I then discuss the relative strengths of the Confucian method over other methods of moral cultivation that exist in the philosophical literature, including Aristotle's method of cultivating virtue in the Nichomachean Ethics, Mark Alfano's factitious virtue theory, and biotechnological moral enhancement.</p>DissertationWong, David2015Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/9958
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Philosophy
Ethics
Psychology
spellingShingle Philosophy
Ethics
Psychology
Stephens, Daniel
The Sage's Psychology: Confucianism Naturalized
description <p>In this dissertation, I attempt to answer the question of how people can come to behave in accordance with their moral standards. To answer this question, I argue for and then apply a naturalistic approach to ethical philosophy that includes an attempt to construct both an empirically adequate account of human psychology and an account of moral cultivation that accords with that account of our psychology. I then present a part of that picture of human psychology, focused on what I call "impediments to virtue", which are the elements of human psychology that make it difficult for us to behave in ways that consistently accord with our moral standards; this picture also serves to show why we need moral cultivation methods and helps to clarify what we need them to do for us. I then argue in favor of an interpretation of the Analects of Confucius on which it is primarily focused on discussions of a method of moral cultivation, and I lay out a detailed account of what that method is and how it works. Turning once again to literature in empirical psychology, I present an argument that we have good reason to think that the Confucian method of moral cultivation as presented in the Analects will be effective in the ways intended. I then discuss the relative strengths of the Confucian method over other methods of moral cultivation that exist in the philosophical literature, including Aristotle's method of cultivating virtue in the Nichomachean Ethics, Mark Alfano's factitious virtue theory, and biotechnological moral enhancement.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Wong, David
author_facet Wong, David
Stephens, Daniel
author Stephens, Daniel
author_sort Stephens, Daniel
title The Sage's Psychology: Confucianism Naturalized
title_short The Sage's Psychology: Confucianism Naturalized
title_full The Sage's Psychology: Confucianism Naturalized
title_fullStr The Sage's Psychology: Confucianism Naturalized
title_full_unstemmed The Sage's Psychology: Confucianism Naturalized
title_sort sage's psychology: confucianism naturalized
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/9958
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