Meaningful Work
Autor Andrea Veltmanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 noi 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190618179
ISBN-10: 0190618175
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 241 x 155 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190618175
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 241 x 155 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Andrea Veltman presents a welcome and engaging argument for the importance of meaningful work in human lives.
In this elegantly written book, Veltman argues that meaningful work is an essential human good and, as such, is necessary for a flourishing life. Her arguments about the centrality of meaningful work are compelling.
Meaningful Work carves out a new direction in liberal political theory and makes for essential reading in a business ethics seminar for undergraduates as well as graduate students. It develops a cogent defense of a eudaimonic capabilities approach by analyzing diverse workplaces and providing a novel feminist contribution to care ethics.
Looking to contemporary figures like Susan Wolf and ancient ones like Aristotle, Veltman constructs a multidimensional and pluralistic account of meaningful work.
Meaningful Work contributes to a growing literature on work in philosophy and political theory...Written in unpretentious style, the book or a chapter will be an excellent addition to an undergraduate or a graduate syllabus...Summing up: Highly recommended.
Andrea Veltman's Meaningful Work raises the bar for all future contributions to this topic: she marshals overwhelming evidence that work is central to human flourishing and demolishes the popular view that our need for work that is meaningful is just one preference among others.
What is the normative status of work? In this elegantly written, powerfully argued book, Andrea Veltman rejects the answer of mainstream political theory that meaningful work is merely one optional value among others. The right way of thinking about meaningful work, Veltman argues, is as a good that is central to human flourishing. She mounts a compelling case for this conception and draws out its far reaching consequences for questions of autonomy and justice. The result is a major contribution to political philosophy that should be essential reading for political theorists, applied ethicists, and indeed anyone concerned by the quality of work and possibilities for improving it.
In this elegantly written book, Veltman argues that meaningful work is an essential human good and, as such, is necessary for a flourishing life. Her arguments about the centrality of meaningful work are compelling.
Meaningful Work carves out a new direction in liberal political theory and makes for essential reading in a business ethics seminar for undergraduates as well as graduate students. It develops a cogent defense of a eudaimonic capabilities approach by analyzing diverse workplaces and providing a novel feminist contribution to care ethics.
Looking to contemporary figures like Susan Wolf and ancient ones like Aristotle, Veltman constructs a multidimensional and pluralistic account of meaningful work.
Meaningful Work contributes to a growing literature on work in philosophy and political theory...Written in unpretentious style, the book or a chapter will be an excellent addition to an undergraduate or a graduate syllabus...Summing up: Highly recommended.
Andrea Veltman's Meaningful Work raises the bar for all future contributions to this topic: she marshals overwhelming evidence that work is central to human flourishing and demolishes the popular view that our need for work that is meaningful is just one preference among others.
What is the normative status of work? In this elegantly written, powerfully argued book, Andrea Veltman rejects the answer of mainstream political theory that meaningful work is merely one optional value among others. The right way of thinking about meaningful work, Veltman argues, is as a good that is central to human flourishing. She mounts a compelling case for this conception and draws out its far reaching consequences for questions of autonomy and justice. The result is a major contribution to political philosophy that should be essential reading for political theorists, applied ethicists, and indeed anyone concerned by the quality of work and possibilities for improving it.
Notă biografică
Andrea Veltman is Associate Professor of Philosophy at James Madison University. She works primarily in ethical, political and feminist philosophy. In addition to publishing scholarly articles in these areas, she is editor of Social and Political Philosophy (Oxford, 2008) and co-editor of Autonomy, Oppression and Gender (Oxford, 2014), Oppression and Moral Agency (Special Issue of Hypatia, 2009) and Evil, Political Violence and Forgiveness (Rowman and Littlefield, 2009).