Loading...

Vico and Moral Perception

by David W. Black (Author)
©1997 Others XIII, 280 Pages
Series: Emory Vico Studies, Volume 5

Summary

Vico and Moral Perception maintains that Vico's New Science offers an idiosyncratic theory of ethics that rejects the modernist notion of «principle» but which at the same time promotes an «historical absolutism» that post-modern thought denies. Vico's account of civic metaphor not only responds effectively to questions of moral agency but provides a unique cultural and rhetorical framework for studying the contexts of attention, the entry points of conscience, that anchor moral perception. In this respect, Vico not only provides a metaphysic of culture but offers singular instruction in the art of wise living.

Details

Pages
XIII, 280
Year
1997
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820428987
Language
English
Keywords
conscience culture idiosyncratic theory ethics
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., Paris, Wien, 1997. XIII, 280 pp.

Biographical notes

David W. Black (Author)

The Author: David W. Black is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Scranton. He received his Ph.D. from the Pennsylvania State University. He edited Commonplaces: Essays on the Nature of Place and has published articles on Vico, the philosophy of culture, aesthetics, philosophy of childhood, philosophy of education, and philosophy of rhetoric.

Previous

Title: Vico and Moral Perception