Description
About the Author
Christine Tappolet is Full Professor at the Departement de philosophie at the Universite de Montreal. Her research interests lie mainly in ethics, moral psychology, and emotion theory. She has edited a number of volumes, including, with Sarah Stroud, Weakness of Will and Practical Rationality (Oxford, 2003), and is the author of a number of articles and chapters on themes such as values, normativity, weakness of will, procrastination, autonomy and emotions, as well as of two books, Emotions et valeurs (2000, Presses Universitaires de France), and with Ruwen Ogien, Les concepts de l'ethique. Faut-il etre consequentialiste? (Hermann, 2008).
Reviews
Tappolet's book is to be recommended, first of all, for the way in which it shows how her theory of emotion interlocks with plausible theories of value and agency, and how these interlocking theories mutually support each other. The project is ambitious, as it requires a grasp of the difficulties in different and vast fields of inquiry, but the book lives up to its ambition: it is rich, accessibly written, well-structured, and extremely well-informed. It is focused, in the sense that in many cases it provides just the right amount of information about the theories discussed... I recommend this book to anyone interested in emotions, motivation, values, moral responsibility, and agency. Tappolet has illuminating things to say about all of these matters and, in particular, about the ways in which they interconnect. Her ambitious project has succeeded. * Benjamin De Mesel, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *
This excellent, concise, and engaging volume is highly recommended for anyone in the philosophy of emotion or interested in the relation between emotions and perception, ethics, or agency. * Justin D'Arms, Australasian Journal of Philosophy. *
Book Information
ISBN 9780199696512
Author Christine Tappolet
Format Hardback
Page Count 246
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Dimensions(mm) 224mm * 143mm * 18mm