Situational Traits of Character
Dispositional Foundations and Implications for Moral Psychology and Friendship
By (author) Candace L. Upton
Publication date:
28 August 2009Length of book:
120 pagesPublisher
Lexington BooksDimensions:
241x168mm7x9"
ISBN-13: 9780739132845
Philosophical tradition holds that character traits are global; if you possess a particular character trait, you will perform trait-related behavior across a broad range of situations. In Situational Traits of Character: Dispositional Foundations and Implications for Moral Psychology and Friendship, a groundbreaking study at the intersection of ethics, moral psychology, and metaphysics, Candace L. Upton offers an intriguing alternative to this philosophical tradition. By appealing to both normative considerations and the metaphysics of dispositions, Upton argues that character traits should be understood situationally. After developing and defending her situational account of character traits, Upon uses this account to adjudicate the debate over the compatibility of the demands of consequentialism with those of genuine friendship in favor of the friendly consequentialist.
Recent experimental results in social psychology seem to indicate that people do not have the sorts of global character traits required for classical virtue ethics. Some theorists have concluded we should give up all talk of virtue and character. Some have suggested that it is enough if there are more particularized situational traits. Some have argued that virtues are idealized character traits which can still be pursued as ideals even if they never actually exist. In her new book, Candace Upton argues that all such reactions are based on misunderstanding the way in which character traits are behavioral and motivational dispositions. She concludes that we can and must continue to accept a virtue ethics with global character traits, while understanding what sorts of conditions can interfere with their realization. The book is a significant advance.