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I Was Wrong - The Meanings of Apologies (Hardcover)
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I Was Wrong - The Meanings of Apologies (Hardcover)
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Apologies pervade our news headlines and our private affairs, but
how should we evaluate these often vague and deceptive rituals?
Discussing numerous examples from ancient and recent history, I Was
Wrong: On The Meanings of Apologies argues that we suffer from
considerable confusion about the moral meanings and social
functions of these complex interactions. Rather than asking whether
a speech act "is or is not" an apology, Smith offers a nuanced
theory of apologetic meaning. Smith leads us with a clear voice
though a series of rich philosophical and interdisciplinary
questions, arguing that apologies have evolved from a confluence of
diverse cultural and religious practices that do not translate
easily into pluralistic secular discourse. After describing several
varieties of apologies between individuals, Smith turns to
collectives. Although apologies from corporations, governments, and
other groups can be profoundly significant, Smith guides readers to
appreciate the kinds of meaning that collective apologies often do
not convey and warns of the dangers of collective acts of
contrition that allow individual wrongdoers to obscure their
personal blame. Dr. Smith is an assistant professor of philosophy
at the University of New Hampshire. A graduate of Vassar College,
he earned a law degree from SUNY at Buffalo and a Ph.D. in
philosophy from Vanderbilt University. Before coming to UNH, he
worked as a litigator for LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene, and MacRae and as
a judicial clerk for the Honorable R.L. Nygaard of the United
States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. He specializes in
the philosophy of Law, Politics, and Society and he writes on and
teaches aesthetics. He is working withCambridge University Press on
the sequel to I Was Wrong, applying his framework for apologetic
meanings to examples in criminal and civil law. His writings have
appeared in journals such as Continental Philosophy Review, Social
Theory and Practice, The Journal of Social Philosophy, Culture,
Theory & Critique, The Rutgers Law Journal, and The Buffalo Law
Review.
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