Moral imagination, according to John Kekes, is indispensable to
a fulfilling and responsible life. By correcting a parochial view
of the possibilities available to us and overcoming mistaken
assumptions about our limitations, moral imagination liberates us
from self-imposed narrowness. It enlarges life by enabling us to
reflect more deeply and widely about how we should live. The
material for this reflection, Kekes believes, is supplied by
literature. Each of the eleven chapters of the book focuses on a
novel, play, or autobiography that exemplifies the protagonist's
reflective self-evaluation. Kekes shows the enduring significance
of these protagonists' successes or failures and how we might apply
what they teach to our very different characters and
circumstances.
Kekes discusses John Stuart Mill's Autobiography, the Oedipus
tragedies by Sophocles, Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton, Henry
James's The Ambassadors and The Golden Bowl, Montaigne's Essays, a
story by Herodotus, and Arthur Koestler's Arrival and Departure.
Throughout, Kekes shows that moral thought must be concrete, not
abstract; that good reasons for or against how we live and what
choices we make are available but must be particular, not
universal; and that the rigid separation of literature, psychology,
and moral thought is detrimental to all three.
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