Universal Love as a Moral Ideal

abstract: Moral philosophy should create concepts and formulate arguments to articulate and assess the statements and behaviors of the morally devoted and the traditions (such as religious and ethical systems) founded by the morally devoted. Many moral devotees and their traditions advocate love as...

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Other Authors: Johnson, Carter Lane (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62800
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-628002020-12-09T05:00:43Z Universal Love as a Moral Ideal abstract: Moral philosophy should create concepts and formulate arguments to articulate and assess the statements and behaviors of the morally devoted and the traditions (such as religious and ethical systems) founded by the morally devoted. Many moral devotees and their traditions advocate love as the ideal to live by. Therefore, moral philosophy needs an account of love as an ideal. I define an ideal as an instrument for organizing a life and show that this definition is more adequate than previous definitions. Ideals can be founded on virtues, and I show that love is a virtue. I define love as a composite attitude whose elements are benevolence, consideration, perception of moment (importance or significance), and receptivity. I define receptivity as the ability to be with someone without imposing careless or compulsive expectations. I argue that receptivity curbs the excesses and supplements the defects of the other elements. Love as an ideal is often understood as universal love. However, there are three problems with universal love: it could be too demanding, it could prevent intimacy and special relationships, and it could require a person to love their abuser. I argue that love can be extended to all human beings without posing unacceptable risks, once love is correctly defined and the ideal correctly understood. Because of the revelations of ecology and the ongoing transformation of sensibilities about the value of the nonhuman, love should be extended to the nonhuman. I argue that love can be given to the nonhuman in the same way it is to the human, with appropriate variations. But how much of the nonhuman would an ideal direct one to love? I argue for two limits to universal love: it does not make sense to extend it to nonliving things, and it can be extended to all living things. I show that loving all living things does not depend on whether they can reciprocate, and I argue that it would not prevent one from living a recognizably human life. Dissertation/Thesis Johnson, Carter Lane (Author) Calhoun, Cheshire (Advisor) Brake, Elizabeth (Committee member) McGregor, Joan (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Philosophy agape enivronmental ethics ethics ideals moral ideals universal love eng 171 pages Doctoral Dissertation Philosophy 2020 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62800 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Philosophy
agape
enivronmental ethics
ethics
ideals
moral ideals
universal love
spellingShingle Philosophy
agape
enivronmental ethics
ethics
ideals
moral ideals
universal love
Universal Love as a Moral Ideal
description abstract: Moral philosophy should create concepts and formulate arguments to articulate and assess the statements and behaviors of the morally devoted and the traditions (such as religious and ethical systems) founded by the morally devoted. Many moral devotees and their traditions advocate love as the ideal to live by. Therefore, moral philosophy needs an account of love as an ideal. I define an ideal as an instrument for organizing a life and show that this definition is more adequate than previous definitions. Ideals can be founded on virtues, and I show that love is a virtue. I define love as a composite attitude whose elements are benevolence, consideration, perception of moment (importance or significance), and receptivity. I define receptivity as the ability to be with someone without imposing careless or compulsive expectations. I argue that receptivity curbs the excesses and supplements the defects of the other elements. Love as an ideal is often understood as universal love. However, there are three problems with universal love: it could be too demanding, it could prevent intimacy and special relationships, and it could require a person to love their abuser. I argue that love can be extended to all human beings without posing unacceptable risks, once love is correctly defined and the ideal correctly understood. Because of the revelations of ecology and the ongoing transformation of sensibilities about the value of the nonhuman, love should be extended to the nonhuman. I argue that love can be given to the nonhuman in the same way it is to the human, with appropriate variations. But how much of the nonhuman would an ideal direct one to love? I argue for two limits to universal love: it does not make sense to extend it to nonliving things, and it can be extended to all living things. I show that loving all living things does not depend on whether they can reciprocate, and I argue that it would not prevent one from living a recognizably human life. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Philosophy 2020
author2 Johnson, Carter Lane (Author)
author_facet Johnson, Carter Lane (Author)
title Universal Love as a Moral Ideal
title_short Universal Love as a Moral Ideal
title_full Universal Love as a Moral Ideal
title_fullStr Universal Love as a Moral Ideal
title_full_unstemmed Universal Love as a Moral Ideal
title_sort universal love as a moral ideal
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62800
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