Fotografía de autor

Herbert Fingarette (1921–2018)

Autor de Confucius: The Secular As Sacred

11+ Obras 356 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Herbert Fingarette was born Herbert Borenstein in Brooklyn, New York on January 20, 1921. He served in the Army during World War II. He received a bachelor's degree in philosophy in 1947 and a doctorate in philosophy in 1949 from the University of California. He taught philosophy at the University mostrar más of California, Santa Barbara for 40 years. He wrote numerous books including The Self in Transformation, Self-Deception, Confucius: The Secular as Sacred, The Meaning of Criminal Insanity, Heavy Drinking: The Myth of Alcoholism as a Disease, Death: Philosophical Soundings, and Mapping Responsibility. He died from heart failure on November 2, 2018 at the age of 97. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Obras de Herbert Fingarette

Obras relacionadas

Philosophy now : an introductory reader (1972) — Contribuidor — 24 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

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It seems well researched, but it's dated, obviously, since it was written in 1989. And it takes the opposite point of view on alcoholism than what is currently "politically correct". (So, basically, if you want to know what it concludes, just take the current belief of alcoholism being a disease out of a person's individual control and flip it on its head.)

Is it accurate? How would I know... there's enough people on each side of any fence to "prove" anything. Can we admit that we agree with the author - not really or the political correctness thought police will getcha!… (más)
 
Denunciada
crazybatcow | Jan 9, 2010 |
Focuses on Confucius's use of ritual as a means of understanding human action and of being human.
 
Denunciada
Fledgist | otra reseña | Feb 12, 2006 |
"If we turn first to the context in which a person puts himself in self-deception, we can say, generally, that such a person has three options. We suppose, of course, that the individual is in a situation in which he is strongly inclined to a form of engagement which is radically inconsistent with the person's governing principles (the person's avowed aims, ideal, values, cultivated tastes, moral principles). One option ... is for the individual to forego the engagement, or to abandon it.... Normally, this is the chosen option of the adult person. To say that a person has put himself in self-deception, however, is to say that the person could not bring about a total abandonment of the engagement.
"A second option is to pursue the engagement, the person avowing it as HIS. To do this would be for the person to face a spiritual crisis... the betraying of the self....
"If there is a stalemate between inclinations which the individual will not give up, and the refusal by the person to avow these inclinations as his, there then remains one last option: the individual does engage himself in the way to which he is inclined, but the person refuses to acknowledge the engagement as his. This is man neither saved nor damned, in limbo, and at war with himself. It is from this perspective, so insistently favoured by Sartre and other Existentialists that we see how someone, by reason of lack of spiritual courage, attempts to save his integrity at a price which amounts to surrendering, however indirectly, the very integrity he cherishes."
Kindle location 1376-96

"When the Freudian emphasizes the compulsiveness of the unconscious, he is calling attention to the fact that it is indeed the individual who is acting, even though there is loss of direct control by the person; when the Freudian emphasizes the inner conflict between the 'forces' within different 'systems' [ego, id, super-ego], he is pointing to the fact that the force of will is a critical factor, for the dilemma cannot be defined within, and therefore cannot be resolved within a rational framework governing both 'systems'. The 'existentially' oriented psychotherapist raises similar issues with a different emphasis: he says that the world of the patient is through and through intelligible as the world of a human being, i.e., that it is a world of engagement, not the physicist's or the disinterested observer's world; and he says, further, that it is not by reference to established universal values but by a 'free', 'arbitrary', 'absurd' choice that the world of the patient will be of one kind or another. And, because the existentially oriented therapist adopts the emphasis he does, he prefers not to speak of a 'patient' at all.
"....The futility of preaching to the neurotic has long been remarked by the psychiatrically oriented. Direct appeals to integrity and moral concern, by evoking the motives of self-deception, strengthen the inclination to it and are self-defeating.
"What the self-deceiver specifically lacks is not concern or integrity but some combination of courage and a way of seeing how to approach his dilemma without probable disaster to himself.... He needs someone who can help him, tactfully but persistently, through a detailed consideration of the texture of life.... [F]or the self-deceiver must be helped to go to the limits of his courage, but not provoked beyond the breaking point. This help is precisely what the ideal psychotherapist would offer. Of course there are no ideal therapists."
Kindle location 1424-39
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Mary_Overton | Dec 17, 2011 |

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Obras
11
También por
1
Miembros
356
Popularidad
#67,310
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
25
Idiomas
2

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