Ethics and attachment : how we make moral judgements
Material type:
TextPublication details: London ; Routledge; 2019Description: xx, 262 p; Includes index and referencesISBN: - 978-1-138-07978-6
- C 158.83 G59e
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PCC CIRCULATION | C 158.83 G59e (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5781 |
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| C 158.39 S4i Interviewing: Principles and Practices | C 158.4 M32a The Art of Leadership | C 158.7 D36i Interpesonal Skills in Organizations | C 158.83 G59e Ethics and attachment : how we make moral judgements | C 160 C 82c Critical thinking skills: developing effective and argument | C 160 C79i Introduction to Logic | C 160 D36 Deductive and inductive logic |
Why are we disgusted when an elderly woman is robbed but sympathize with the actions of a Robin Hood? Why do acts of cruelty against a helpless kitten bother us more than does the trampling of ants? In Ethics and Attachment: How We Make Moral Judgments, psychoanalyst and philosopher Aner Govrin offers the attachment approach to moral judgment, an innovative new model of the process involved in making such moral judgments. Drawing on clinical findings from psychoanalysis, neuroscience and developmental psychology, the author argues that infants' experience in the first year of life provides them with the basic tools needed to reach complex moral judgments later in life. With reference to Winnicott and Bowlby, the author examines how attachments affect our abilities to apply to make moral decisions. With its wholly new ideas about moral judgments, Ethics and Attachment will be of great interest to ethics and moral philosophy scholars, law students, and psychoanalytic psychotherapists
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