麻豆影院

Veroni Lecture: Cheshire Calhoun

This event already has occurred.

Saturday, 03 February, 2024 - 7:00 pm to Saturday, 03 February, 2024 - 9:00 pm

CVA
165

麻豆影院 Veroni Memorial Lectures in Philosophy and the Humanities

Cheshire CalhounCheshire Calhoun

Professor of Philosophy, Arizona State University

Kindnesses

Friday, February 2, 2024, 7 p.m.
Location CVA 165

Dessert Reception to Follow

What kindness is seems both obvious and nonobvious. On the obvious side: We effortlessly use 鈥渒ind鈥 to describe actions and people and find familiarly meaningful occurrences of 鈥渒ind鈥 in polite missives, inspirational literature, novels, everyday conversation, and injunctions to 鈥渂e kind鈥 or to 鈥減ractice random acts of kindness.鈥 On the nonobvious side: The ease of generating examples of kindness is not matched by a similar ease in saying what they share in common.

What makes it difficult to define kindness is that everyday understandings of kindness spring from multiple sources. The result is that talk about kindness is shaped by three different conceptions of kindness: kindness as general, benevolently motivated beneficence, kindness as a set of social practices of micro benevolence/beneficence, and kindness as expression of kinship. Each conception gives us a different answer to the question 鈥淲hat is kindness?鈥 What feature(s) of actions and persons does 鈥渒ind鈥 pick out and is being encouraged in injunctions to be kind? And each gives a different answer to the question 鈥淲here does kindness fit into the moral landscape?鈥 Is kindness just another name for benevolently motivated beneficence? If so, kindness would be a pinnacle in the moral landscape, alongside respect for autonomy. Or does 鈥渒indness鈥 require emotional warmth or personal caring? If so, it may be less clear where kindness sits in the moral landscape.   

Cheshire Calhoun is Professor of Philosophy at Arizona State University. She works in the areas of normative ethics, moral psychology, philosophy of emotion, feminist philosophy, and gay and lesbian philosophy. She has recently published a collection of previously published essays under the title Moral Aims: Essays on the Importance of Getting it Right and Practicing Morality with Others (OUP 2016), and a new book titled Doing Valuable Time: The Present, the Future, and Meaningful Living (OUP 2018). She is series editor for Oxford University Press鈥檚 Studies in Feminist Philosophy