Updating Basket....

Sign In
0 Items

BASKET SUMMARY

There are currently no items added to the basket
Sign In
0 Items

BASKET SUMMARY

There are currently no items added to the basket

This item is available to order.
Please allow 2-3 weeks for delivery.

Hardback

£82.00

Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780192898104
Number of Pages: 208
Published: 22/12/2022
Width: 16.5 cm
Height: 24 cm
In contemporary culture, accountability is usually understood in terms of holding people who have done something wrong accountable for their actions. As such, it is virtually synonymous with punishing someone. Living Accountably argues that accountability should also be understood as a significant, forward-looking virtue, an excellence possessed by those who willingly embrace being accountable to those who have proper standing, when that standing is exercised appropriately. Those who have this virtue are people who strive to live accountably. The book gives a fine-grained description of the virtue and how it is exercised, including an account of the motivational profile of the one who has the virtue. It examines the relation of accountability to other virtues, such as honesty and humility, as well as opposing vices, such as self-deception, arrogance, and servility. Though the virtue of accountability is compatible with individual autonomy, recognizing the importance of the virtue does justice to the social character of human persons. C. Stephen Evans also explores the history of this virtue in other cultures and historical eras, providing evidence that the virtue is widely recognized, even if it is somewhat eclipsed in modern western societies. Accountability is also a virtue that connects ethical life with religious life for many people, since it is common for people to have a sense that they are accountable in a global way for how they live their lives. Living Accountably explores the question as to whether global accountability can be understood in a purely secular way, as accountability to other humans, or whether it must be understood as accountability to God, or some other transcendent reality.
Preface and Acknowledgements 1: Introduction: Accountability as a Relationship and a Virtue 2: Accountability and Moral Philosophy: Why Accountability Is a Significant Virtue 3: Standing, Domains, and Accountability: Filling in the Story 4: Accountability under Other Names and at Other Times and Places 5: Accountability's Relation to Other Virtues and Vices 6: Global Accountability 7: Transcendent Views of Global Accountability 8: Empirical Issues 9: Conclusions: The Promise of Accountability

C. Stephen Evans (University Professor of Philosophy and Humanities, University Professor of Philosophy and Humanities, Baylor University)

Born in Atlanta, Georgia, C. Stephen Evans received his Bachelor's degree from Wheaton College in 1969 and his PhD from Yale University in philosophy in 1974 as a Danforth Fellow. He is currently University Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at Baylor University, where he has taught since 2001, and is also a Professorial Research Fellow at the Institute for Ethics and Society at the University of Notre Dame Australia. Evans's most recently published book was Kierkegaard and Spirituality: Accountability as the Meaning of Human Existence. Several of his books have won prizes and his works have been translated into multiple languages, including Spanish, Finnish, Russian, and Polish.

Friends Scheme

Our online book club offers discounts on hundreds of titles...