Love's Virtues
Mike W. Martin
224 pages, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0766-2, $35.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0767-9, $14.95
Bonding Eros with virtue is neither
unrealistic nor naive, contends Mike Martin. On the contrary,
it's practical, even pragmatic. Virtues serve to focus, structure,
and even define erotic love. In particular, caring, respect,
faithfulness, honesty, fairness, wisdom, and gratitude are central
to successful, long-term relationships.
In Love's Virtues, Martin takes a look at why moral
values enhance and solidify erotic and marital relationships.
In the process, he challenges the widespread cynicism about marriage
while remaining sensitive to the innumerable problems confronting
couples. His approach to marital love is both traditional and
modern. Traditional, by seeking to understand the moral significance
of relationships based on long-term and lifelong commitments
to love. Modern, by proceeding within a pluralist framework that
affirms many kinds of erotic love, depending on the ideals partners
embrace and their interpretations (within limits) of love's virtues.
Marriages, as Martin understands them, are moral relationships
that involve sexual desires (at some time during the relationship)
and are based on long-term commitment, whether or not those commitments
are formally sanctioned by legal or religious authorities. In
this sense, marriages are not restricted by the law, religious
tenets, or the partners' sexual orientation.
Drawing on literature, psychology, and philosophy--from Plato
and Shakespeare to Ingmar Bergman, Robert Bellah, and Carol Gilligan;
from Tolstoy and D.H. Lawrence to Erich Fromm, Erica Jong, and
Alice Walker--Martin reminds us that virtuous erotic love is
a way to morally value another person. Understanding love as
a virtue-structured way to appreciate others, he illustrates,
is itself a step toward renewing marital faith.
"This book brings together a sensitive understanding
of love and an unusually careful, even painstaking, analysis
of the enormous but often neglected role of morality and the
virtues in love. Martin's discussions of such virtues as caring,
courage, fidelity, and honesty are superb, the examples well-chosen,
the argument personal but nevertheless rigorous, the prose accessible
and enjoyable to read. This is certainly one of the most original
and insightful books in this rapidly growing field of philosophical
exploration."--Robert C. Solomon, author of About
Love: Reinventing Romance for Our Time and coeditor of The
Philosophy of (Erotic) Love
MIKE W. MARTIN, professor of philosophy at Chapman
University, is author or editor of Self-Deception
and Morality, Virtuous Giving: Philanthropy, Voluntary
Service, and Caring, and Self-Deception
and Self-Understanding: New Essays in Philosophy and Psychology.
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