Lexington Books
Pages: 280
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-2027-9 • Hardback • April 2007 • $109.00 • (£84.00)
978-0-7391-2028-6 • Paperback • April 2007 • $46.99 • (£36.00)
Barbara Darling-Smith is assistant professor of religion at Wheaton College.
Part 1 Responsibility and Selfhood
Chapter 2 Responsible Fictions
Chapter 3 Responsibility Without a Self
Chapter 4 The Way is Made in the Walking: Responsibility as Relational Virtuosity
Chapter 5 Where Art Thou? Biblical Perspectives on Responsibility
Part 6 Responsible Roles Toward Other Human Beings
Chapter 7 Moral Responsibility in a Democratic Society
Chapter 8 Am I My Brother's Keeper? An Aristotelian Take on Responsibility for Others
Chapter 9 Tasteless Historical Stories: An Historical Theologian's REsponsibility to Past and Present
Chapter 10 Balancing Medicine's Moral Ledger: Realigning Trust and Responsibility
Chapter 11 Responsibilities of Corporations: Managing Morally and Profitably
Part 12 Responsibility Toward Nonhuman Beings and the Earth
Chapter 13 Towards an Art of Dwelling
Chapter 14 Ecological and Social Responsibility: The Making of the Earth Charter
This book is an eloquent collection of essays by some of our leading philosophers and ethicists. They enable us to reenvision responsibility and responsiveness amidst our modern challenges of injustice and environmental degradation. There is a fresh perspective here that situates humans in interdependent relation to other humans and to the Earth community at large.
— Mary Evelyn Tucker, Yale University
Responsibility is a wonderful collection of excellent essays by a group of noted scholars, teachers, and lay activists who examine in-depth the very idea of human beings bearing responsibility for themselves, other persons and the natural environment. The essays in this carefully edited book are uniformly lucid and insightful. A major contribution—and one very much needed at the present time.
— Eliot Deutsch, University of Hawaii
This book was well worth reading.
— Metapsychology Online, December 2007
The strength of the book lies in its unconventional breadth....As it is accessible to a wide readership, the book would work in undergraduate ethics course.
— Christopher Waters; Religious Studies Review
This broad range of perspectives offers a variety of interesting insights on the theme of responsibility....The collection remains a valuable addition to the literature on responsibility....It is recommended to all those looking for an introduction to the topic from a wide range of perspectives.
— H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online, February 2009
At a time when so many rights are being loudly trumpeted while the attendant responsibilities to our fellow beings and the earth are quietly ignored, this collection of essays is most welcome. A distinguished group of authors examine various notions of responsibility from the perspectives not only of Western ethics but also of ancient Greek thought, Indian Buddhism, classical Chinese philosophy, the Bible and Christianity, and American pragmatism—all to an enlightening effect.
— Graham Parkes, Professor of Philosophy, University College Cork
The edited collection brings together a diverse range of readings concerning responsibility by leading scholars and lay people. This collection benefits from the wide array of perspectives on responsibility. Given the sheer largeness of the concept it is refreshing to see it approached so diversely. This broad range of perspectives offers a variety of interesting insights on the theme of responsibility. A valuable addition to the literature on responsibility. Its sheer diversity along with the uniform quality of its writing will benefit scholars and those outside academia alike.
— Peter Bloom; H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online