Compassion and Moral GuidanceCompassion is a word we use frequently but rarely precisely. One reason we lack a philosophically precise understanding of compassion is that moral philosophers today give it virtually no attention. Indeed, in the predominant ethical traditions of the West (deontology, consequentialism, virtue ethics), compassion tends to be either passed over without remark or explicitly dismissed as irrelevant. And yet in the predominant ethical traditions of Asia, compassion is centrally important: All else revolves around it. This is clearly the case in Buddhist ethics, and compassion plays a similarly indispensable role in Confucian and Daoist ethics. |
Contents
Chapter 1 What Is Compassion and What Is It Not? | 1 |
Chapter 2 What Is the Com of Compassion? | 50 |
Chapter 3 Defining Compassion | 87 |
Chapter 4 Objections to an Ethic of Compassion | 132 |
Chapter 5 Compassion in Action | 151 |
Notes | 183 |
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