Editors' Introduction
Christian B. Miller, R. Michael Furr, Angela Knobel, William
Fleeson
Section 1: Overview of the Study of Character in Philosophy and
Psychology
Chapter 1: "Some Foundational Questions in Philosophy about
Character," Christian B. Miller and Angela Knobel
Chapter 2: "Personality Science and the Foundations of Character,"
William Fleeson, R. Michael Furr, Eranda Jayawickreme, Erik G.
Helzer, Anselma G. Hartley, and Peter Meindl
Section 2: Beliefs about Character
Chapter 3: "Lay Beliefs in True Altruism versus Universal Egoism,"
Jochen E. Gebauer, Constantine Sedikides, Mark R. Leary, and Jens
B. Asendorpf
Chapter 4: "Understanding the Importance and Perceived Structure of
Moral Character," Geoffrey P. Goodwin, Jared Piazza, and Paul
Rozin
Section 3: The Existence and Nature of Character
Chapter 5: "Moving Character Beyond the Person-Situation Debate -
The Stable and Dynamic Nature of Virtues in Everyday Life," Wiebke
Bleidorn
Chapter 6: "Character Traits in the Workplace: A Three-Month Diary
Study of Moral and Immoral Organizational Behaviors," Taya R. Cohen
and A. T. Panter
Chapter 7: "The Mixed Trait Model of Character Traits and the Moral
Domains of Resource Distribution and Theft," Christian B.
Miller
Chapter 8: "Emotion and Character," Charles Starkey
Section 4: Character and Ethical Theory
Chapter 9: "Taking Moral Risks and Becoming Virtuous," Rebecca
Stangl
Chapter 10: "Dispositions, Character, and the Value of Acts,"
Bradford Cokelet
Chapter 11: "Exemplarism and Admiration," Linda Zagzebski
Section 5: Virtue Epistemology
Chapter 12: "People Listen to People Who Listen: Instilling Virtues
of Deference," Kristoffer Ahlstrom-Vij
Chapter 13: "'Why Can't We Be Friends?' Reflections on Empirical
Psychology and Virtue Epistemology," Nathan L. King
Chapter 14: "From Virtue Epistemology to Abilism: Theoretical and
Empirical Developments," John Turri
Section 6: Particular Virtues
Chapter 15: "Christian Humility as a Social Virtue," Mike
Austin
Chapter 16: "A Different Kind of Wisdom," Angela Knobel
Chapter 17: "Bearing Burdens and the Character of God in the Hebrew
Bible," Cristian Mihut
Chapter 18: "Domain Specificity in Self-Control," Angela Lee
Duckworth and Eli Tsukayama
Chapter 19: "Can Text Messages Make People Kinder?" Sara
Konrath
Section 7: Character Development
Chapter 20: "The Emergence of Moral Character in Infancy:
Developmental Changes and Individual Differences in Fairness
Concerns and Prosocial Behavior during the First Two Years of
Life," Jessica A. Sommerville
Chapter 21: "Character Development in the School Years: Relations
among Theory of Mind, Moral Identity and Positive and Negative
Behavior toward Peers," Elizabeth A. Boerger and Anthony J.
Hoffman
Chapter 22: "Character across Early Emerging Adulthood: Character
Traits, Character Strivings, and Moral Self-Attributes," Erik E.
Noftle
Chapter 23: "Etiquette and Exemplarity in Judaism," Tzvi Novick
Chapter 24: "Christian Character Formation and the Infusion of
Grace," Ray S. Yeo
Chapter 25: "Necessity and Human Agency: Cultivating Character in
the Reformed Christian Tradition," Elizabeth Cochran
Chapter 26: "Liturgy and the Moral Life," Terence Cuneo
Chapter 27: "Cultivating Virtues through Sartorial Practices: The
Case of the Islamic Veil in Indonesia," Elizabeth M. Bucar
Section 8: Challenges to Character and Virtue from Neuroscience and
Situationism
Chapter 28: "Character Traits and the Neuroscience of Social
Behavior," Daniel McKaughan
Chapter 29: "Character and Coherence: Testing the Stability of
Naturalistically Observed Daily Moral Behavior," Matthias R. Mehl,
Kathryn L. Bollich, John M. Doris, and Simine Vazire
Chapter 30: "Taking Evil into the Lab: Exploring the Frontiers of
Morality and Individual Differences," David Gallardo-Pujol,
Elizabet Orekhova, Verónica Benet-Martínez, and Mel Slater
Chapter 31: "War Crimes: Causes, Excuses, and Blame," Matthew
Talbert and Jessica Wolfendale
Index
Christian B. Miller is Professor of Philosophy at Wake Forest
University and Director of the Character Project.
R. Michael Furr is Professor of Psychology at Wake Forest
University and Psychology Co-Director for the Character
Project.
Angela Knobel is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the Catholic
University of America and Theology Director of the Character
Project.
William Fleeson is Professor of Psychology at Wake Forest
University and Psychology Co-Director for the Character Project.
"Character is diverse in a disciplinary sense, as noted, and in a theological sense as well...What Miller and his colleagues have accomplished (and continue to pursue) is not only admirable, it is valuable-necessary even." -- Reading Religion
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