FORGIVENESS, RESENTMENT, AND INTENTIONAL AGENCY

Authors

  • Anthony Marc Williams Duke University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/eph.v19i1.1

Keywords:

humanism, metaphysics, forgiveness

Abstract

Forgiveness is a highly personal act. Only a moral agent can forgive and the only proper object of forgiveness is a moral agent. One trait that is particularly characteristic of moral agents is selfevaluation. It is precisely this activity that is involved in a genuine act of forgiveness. According to Bishop Butler and several other contemporary philosophers, forgiveness involves foreswearing one’s resentment towards another person. Successful forgiveness, for these accounts, essentially involves overcoming oneself. An important part of this self-overcoming involves dissolving resentment. I argue that disowning resentment is a key step along the way towards successful forgiveness. In order to dissolve resentment, an individual must engage in self-reflection and selfevaluation. Frankfurt’s hierarchical theory of intentional agency provides a helpful conceptual apparatus for analyzing the act of forgiveness.

Author Biography

  • Anthony Marc Williams, Duke University

    Anthony Marc Williams (Ph.D., Duke University 2003) is currently Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the College of Charleston. His research specialty is in metaethics, specifically moral psychology and moral epistemology. Recent work has explored the structure of moral agency and implications of metaphysical facts about human nature for ethical theory.

References

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Published

2013-10-09

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Williams, A. M. (2013). FORGIVENESS, RESENTMENT, AND INTENTIONAL AGENCY. Essays in the Philosophy of Humanism, 19(1), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1558/eph.v19i1.1