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Reconstructing Schopenhauer's Ethics - Hope, Compassion, and Animal Welfare (Hardcover)
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Reconstructing Schopenhauer's Ethics - Hope, Compassion, and Animal Welfare (Hardcover)
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At the apex of his influence, from about 1860 up to the start of
World War I, Schopenhauer was known first and foremost as a
philosopher of pessimism. Still today, his main reputation is as
one of the few philosophers to have argued that it would have been
better never to have been. Sandra Shapshay aims to complicate and
challenge this predominant picture of Schopenhauer's ethical
thought, arguing that while the pessimistic, resigned Schopenhauer
represents one side of the thinker, there is another, more hopeful
side that is equally important to his legacy and essential to fully
understanding his philosophy. Schopenhauer's ethical thought
contains a hopeful, progressive strand, and the main task of this
book is to reconstruct it. The resulting position, which Shapshay
terms "compassionate moral realism," offers a hybrid Kantian moral
realist/sentimentalist theory and a Schopenhauerian value ontology
of degrees of inherent value. The reconstruction is novel in three
main ways. First, it views Schopenhauer as a more faithful Kantian
than most commentators have been apt to recognize. Second, it sees
Schopenhauer's philosophy as an evolving rather than static body of
thought, especially with respect to the place of the Platonic Ideas
in his system; Schopenhauer's views in the philosophy of nature
changed as he encountered proto-Darwinian thought, and this change
weakens Schopenhauer's own grounds for pessimism. A third novelty
is the claim, concerning his ethical thought, that there are really
two Schopenhauers rather than one: the "Knight of Despair" and the
"Knight of Hope" distinction introduced in this book helps to
capture the incompatibility between the resignationist and the
compassionate moral realist sides of Schopenhauer's ethical
thought.
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