The Politics of Character Development: A Marxist Reappraisal of the Moral Life
By (Author) Kit R. Christensen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st July 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ethics and moral philosophy
Far-left political ideologies and movements
Anthropology
170
Hardback
152
Very little has been written on the political implications of diverse accounts of virtue, vice, and moral character, and even less has been offered on this subject from any identifiably leftist perspective. This book begins by demonstrating the plausibility of a Marxist ethics in general; the author then proceeds to work out an understanding of moral character itself and its role in living a good life, based on a historical materialist philosophical anthropology. This leads to an analysis of which character traits should be considered virtues and vices, and what would count as a successful or unsuccessful moral education, within the context of contemporary North American society. The text concludes by focusing on the problems associated with identifying real-life, useful exemplifications of such virtuous and vicious character.
.,."offers a clear and focused account of the importance of engaging in Marxist moral evaluation and character formation. Christensen's ability to state his account in conventional terms enables him to engage readers unfamiliar with Marx's work and scholarship based on it."-Choice
...offers a clear and focused account of the importance of engaging in Marxist moral evaluation and character formation. Christensen's ability to state his account in conventional terms enables him to engage readers unfamiliar with Marx's work and scholarship based on it.-Choice
..."offers a clear and focused account of the importance of engaging in Marxist moral evaluation and character formation. Christensen's ability to state his account in conventional terms enables him to engage readers unfamiliar with Marx's work and scholarship based on it."-Choice
KIT R. CHRISTENSEN is Professor of Philosophy at Bemidji State University, located in Northern Minnesota. He specializes in value theory, and has published a number of essays on social and political philosophy.