The Immorality of Emotional Response. Liberty and the Slavery Metaphor in Wollstonecraft’s Theory of Property
(2005)- Abstract
- I am concerned with Mary Wollstonecraft’s political morality. In it she makes no moral room, I claim, for emotional responses or emotional reasons for action, and it is important that she doesn’t. I will start by pointing at reasons for why it is important. I will then go on to analyse the content of and relations between her main political concepts: the triad of liberty, equality and virtue, within a theory of rights. I will end by discussing her political morality in relation to a particular case, that of property. When it comes to emotional responses her thoughts on the proper diffusion of property and her critique of charity is a good case in point. In the end, the reasons I will give now for why there is no moral room for emotional... (More)
- I am concerned with Mary Wollstonecraft’s political morality. In it she makes no moral room, I claim, for emotional responses or emotional reasons for action, and it is important that she doesn’t. I will start by pointing at reasons for why it is important. I will then go on to analyse the content of and relations between her main political concepts: the triad of liberty, equality and virtue, within a theory of rights. I will end by discussing her political morality in relation to a particular case, that of property. When it comes to emotional responses her thoughts on the proper diffusion of property and her critique of charity is a good case in point. In the end, the reasons I will give now for why there is no moral room for emotional response, will hopefully appear to have been illustrated by the analysis and the application that follow. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1652320
- author
- Halldenius, Lena LU
- publishing date
- 2005
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- liberty, property, Mary Wollstonecraft, emotions, charity
- host publication
- Philosophical Aspects on Emotions
- editor
- Carlson, Åsa
- publisher
- Thales
- ISBN
- 9789172350533
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 3776614a-8831-4e5e-864d-8eec1999177b (old id 1652320)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 12:14:08
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:09:48
@inbook{3776614a-8831-4e5e-864d-8eec1999177b, abstract = {{I am concerned with Mary Wollstonecraft’s political morality. In it she makes no moral room, I claim, for emotional responses or emotional reasons for action, and it is important that she doesn’t. I will start by pointing at reasons for why it is important. I will then go on to analyse the content of and relations between her main political concepts: the triad of liberty, equality and virtue, within a theory of rights. I will end by discussing her political morality in relation to a particular case, that of property. When it comes to emotional responses her thoughts on the proper diffusion of property and her critique of charity is a good case in point. In the end, the reasons I will give now for why there is no moral room for emotional response, will hopefully appear to have been illustrated by the analysis and the application that follow.}}, author = {{Halldenius, Lena}}, booktitle = {{Philosophical Aspects on Emotions}}, editor = {{Carlson, Åsa}}, isbn = {{9789172350533}}, keywords = {{liberty; property; Mary Wollstonecraft; emotions; charity}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Thales}}, title = {{The Immorality of Emotional Response. Liberty and the Slavery Metaphor in Wollstonecraft’s Theory of Property}}, year = {{2005}}, }