ABSTRACT

This is the first book to bring together Western and Chinese perspectives on both moral and intellectual virtues. Editors Chienkuo Mi, Michael Slote, and Ernest Sosa have assembled some of the world’s leading epistemologists and ethicists—located in the U.S., Europe, and Asia—to explore in a global context what they are calling, "the virtue turn." The 15 chapters have never been published previously and by covering topics that bridge epistemology and moral philosophy suggest a widespread philosophical turn away from Kantian and Utilitarian issues and towards character- and agent-based concerns. A goal of this volume is to show students and researchers alike that the (re-)turn toward virtue underway in the Western tradition is being followed by a similar (re-)turn toward virtue in Chinese philosophy.

chapter |11 pages

Knowledge as Action

chapter |22 pages

Epistemic Virtue and Vice

Reliabilism, Responsibilism, and Personalism

chapter |20 pages

Perceptual Justification

Factive Reasons and Fallible Virtues

chapter |21 pages

“Empathy with Devils”

What We Can Learn from Wang Yangming