This book offers a new reading of Jonathan Edwards's virtue
ethic that examines a range of qualities Edwards identifies as
"virtues" and considers their importance for contemporary ethics.
Each of Edwards's human virtues is "receptive" in nature: humans
acquire the virtues through receiving divine grace, and therefore
depend utterly on Edwards's God for virtue's acquisition. By
contending that humans remain authentic moral agents even as they
are unable to attain virtue apart from his God's assistance,
Edwards challenges contemporary conceptions of moral
responsibility, which tend to emphasize human autonomy as a central
part of accountability.
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