Description: This book brings together some of the foremost researchers of honor to debate honor's meaning and its compatibility with liberalism, democracy, and modernity. Contributors examine honor past to present, from masculine and feminine perspectives, and in North American, European, ...
Brief description: Shannon E. French is the Inamori Professor in Ethics, director of the Inamori International Center for Ethics and Excellence, and a professor in philosophy and law at Case Western Reserve University, USA. Prior to CWRU, she taught for eleven years at the United States Naval Academy. She founded the first MA program in Military Ethics at CWRU, works globally with the US and allied military, service academies, and chaplain corps, and held the General Hugh Shelton Distinguished Visiting Chair in Ethics for seven years. Her core fields are military ethics and ethical issues in emerging technology.
Review Quotes:
"This is a superb anthology that questions the value and even the existence of honor in the contemporary world. This timely book insofar as the essays contained therein analyze practices that differ from previous research that focused almost exclusively on a Mediterranean perspective. This is an impressive set of works that casts new light on an ancient concept." --The European Legacy
"Honor in the Modern World: Interdisciplinary Perspectives is an extremely important work that is at the forefront of a larger reevaluation of honor--presenting it as a still-relevant and modern concept with global political, social, and moral implications. Featuring chapters by some of the field's top scholars across several disciplines, this book advances the relevance of honor from the ancient world to the present day. Simply put, it makes the case that honor still matters from the battlefield to the boardroom to the classroom, and beyond." --Craig Smith, William Woods University "After decades of neglect in moral philosophy, the topic of honor is starting to receive scholarly attention again--thanks in large part to the authors in this volume. The essays in this excellent collection tackle the thorny question of how honor can fit within the western liberal value system and offer compelling reasons for why we need to take honor seriously in today's world." --Tamler Sommers, University of Houston