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Three Relations Between Roles and the Good

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Published
Publication date16/05/2023
Host publicationThe Ethics of Social Roles
EditorsAlex Barber, Sean Cordell
Place of PublicationOxford
PublisherOxford University Press
ISBN (print)9780192843562
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

What is the relation between roles and the human good? Between our construction, maintenance, and enaction of institutions, and the life which goes well for the person whose life it is? This chapter reads selected martial autobiographies to explore three relations and what they mean for the nature of the good:
1. Tools for self-shaping: roles are social technology for shaping ourselves towards good understood as fulfillment of desires which are independent of those roles.
2. Good-making practices: roles are parts of good-making practices which transform individuals by creating goods and initiating individuals into them.
3. Self-discovery: roles are a method for gaining self-knowledge. They help each of us discover her unchosen, seedlike, initially opaque self, and thereby discover her particular good, which is that self’s realization.
The chapter concludes that some roles’ relation to the good is that they test and reveal the self and therefore its good.