TY - BOOK AU - AU - AU - ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Self-Evaluation: Affective and Social Grounds of Intentionality T2 - Philosophical Studies Series SN - 9789400712669 AV - BF201 U1 - 153 23 PY - 2011/// CY - Dordrecht PB - Springer Netherlands KW - Philosophy (General) KW - Philosophy of mind KW - Social sciences KW - Consciousness KW - Psychology KW - Cognitive Psychology KW - Philosophy of Mind KW - Social Sciences, general N1 - Preface: Anita Konzelmann Ziv -- Self-Evaluation Philosophical Perspectives -- PART I - Evaluative and Self Evaluative Attitudes -- How to Have Self-Directed Attidudes: Lynne Ruder Baker -- Interpretation, Cause and Avowal: On the Evaluative Dimension of Selfhood: Axel Seeman -- Who Do You Think You are? The How-What Theory of Character and Personality: Frederico Lauria & Alain PȨ-Curto -- PART II - Self-Evaluation and Rationality -- Self-Evaluation and the Ends of Existence: Carol Rovane -- Self-Evaluation and Action: Juliette Gloor -- Self-Trust and Social Truth: Keith Lehrer -- PART III - Self-Evaluative Emotions -- Sentimentalism and Self-Directed Emotions: Jesse Prinz -- Psychopathic Resentment: John Deigh -- Self-Knowledge, Knowledge of Others, and the thing called love: Edward Hartcourt -- Is Shame a Social Emotion?: Julien Deonna & Fabrice Teroni -- PART IV Evaluating the Social Self -- Feeling up to it The Sense of Ability in the Phenomenology of Action: Hans Bernhard Schmid -- Self-Evaluation in Intention: Individual and Shared: Lilian OBrien -- Where Individuals Meet Society. The Collective Dimensions of Self-Evaluation and Self-Knowledge: Ulla Schmid -- About the Authors N2 - This volume examines the affective and social dimensions of self-related activities. This is a novel way of approaching traditional questions such as the scope and purpose of self-knowledge, the interrelation between the social and theindividual person, and the significance of emotional appraisal. Focusing on self-evaluation instead of self-knowledge in shifting from a doxastic to an axiologicalperspective. The scientific added value created by this approach isthreefold: i) it opensup a broadr perspective on the structure of self-reflection which includes a matrix of values; ii) as valauations imply a social contaxt, it extends to social relations; iii) since affective attitudes are crucial forthe recognition of values, it incorparates feelings and emotions. In short, self-evaluation is a conception of self-refelection which includes sociality and affectivity. This volume contains contributions by leading figures in philosophy ofmind and action, emotion theory, and phenomenology. It allows a global view on the most recent reflections on the subject matter, being of interest for professional philosophers, as well as for researchers from various nighboring disciplines UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1266-9 ER -