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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Noel A. CazenavePublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781032549774ISBN 10: 1032549777 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 15 September 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPreface and Acknowledgements Chapter 1 Kindness Wars: An Introduction Chapter 2 The Evolution of Human Kindness from Before History Chapter 3 The Political Construction of Kindness from Thucydides to Hobbes Chapter 4 Self-Interest Versus the Common Good: The Enlightenment Debates Chapter 5 Industrialization, Socialism, and Social Darwinism in the Nineteenth-Century Social Thought Chapter 6 Wars, Hyper-Capitalism, and Human Rights in the Twentieth Century and Beyond Chapter 7 Making Black Lives Matter: Kindness Battles in Twenty-First Century America Chapter 8 The Future Of Kindness: Toward the Construction of Kinder Societies Index About the AuthorReviews"""Noel A. Cazenave brings his magnificent investigation of the evolution of kindness and the ways in which western culture and ideas have too often undermined it to a new threshold of relevance. He boldly engages the deep racial, class and economic divisions that the United States and the world must contend with in an urgent, wise and effective manner to olve the problems of in-group myopia that need to be wisely addressed in education and society. Kindness really is our greatest human asset. This book is immensely important for those who are wanting to couple kindness with the realism of hope rather than with the superficiality of dispositional optimism. It takes a great sociologist like Cazenave to lead the way forward into a new era. With this book he rises into the highest ranks of the great sociologists of kindness and altruistic love."" - Stephen G. Post, PhD, Professor and Director, Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care & Bioethics, Stony Brook University ""Noel Cazenave's Kindness Wars is a majestic work of political and social theory. Written in highly accessible language, it starts by surveying debates about human nature, moves through arguments in antiquity and then on to political theory as it developed in the early modern period and the enlightenment, culminating with a sustained analysis of current political scene. Throughout it unflagging sustains its original and highly inventive framing that kindness is contingent upon the social context in which individuals get to act (on their own and in solidarity with others). There are many take-aways including how the class-based nature of western capitalist societies poses a persistent constraint on people's ability to practice kindness. This book is written to be widely read and surely deserves to be."" - Sanford Schram, Professor of Political Science, Hunter College, City University of New York ""Through the unique lens of a conflict theoretical perspective, Dr. Cazenave explores not only the definition of kindness but also the question of what it means to be kind and whether to be kind at all. As he notes, the millennia old ""kindness theory"" permeates history defining what is a kind society. This volume is an intellectual tour de force reviewing the politically-engaged conceptualizations of kindness at the center of the Enlightenment-era and other Western political and economic debates giving us a far different perspective about human beings, possibilities and kindness then most are aware. Through this volume we have a roadmap to create a worldwide and enduring kindness revolution. A must read."" - Professor James R. Doty, Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery and Director and Founder of The Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, Stanford University School of Medicine" """Noel A. Cazenave brings his magnificent investigation of the evolution of kindness and the ways in which western culture and ideas have too often undermined it to a new threshold of relevance. He boldly engages the deep racial, class and economic divisions that the United States and the world must contend with in an urgent, wise and effective manner to solve the problems of in-group myopia that need to be wisely addressed in education and society. Kindness really is our greatest human asset. This book is immensely important for those who are wanting to couple kindness with the realism of hope rather than with the superficiality of dispositional optimism. It takes a great sociologist like Cazenave to lead the way forward into a new era. With this book he rises into the highest ranks of the great sociologists of kindness and altruistic love."" - Stephen G. Post, PhD, Professor and Director, Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care & Bioethics, Stony Brook University ""Noel Cazenave's Kindness Wars is a majestic work of political and social theory. Written in highly accessible language, it starts by surveying debates about human nature, moves through arguments in antiquity and then on to political theory as it developed in the early modern period and the enlightenment, culminating with a sustained analysis of the current political scene. Throughout it unflaggingly sustains its original and highly inventive framing that kindness is contingent upon the social context in which individuals get to act (on their own and in solidarity with others). There are many take-aways including how the class-based nature of western capitalist societies poses a persistent constraint on people's ability to practice kindness. This book is written to be widely read and surely deserves to be."" - Sanford Schram, Professor of Political Science, Hunter College, City University of New York ""Through the unique lens of a conflict theoretical perspective, Dr. Cazenave explores not only the definition of kindness but also the question of what it means to be kind and whether to be kind at all. As he notes, the millennia old ""kindness theory"" permeates history defining what is a kind society. This volume is an intellectual tour de force reviewing the politically-engaged conceptualizations of kindness at the center of the Enlightenment-era and other Western political and economic debates and giving us a far different perspective about human beings, possibilities and kindness then most are aware. Through this volume we have a roadmap to create a worldwide and enduring kindness revolution. A must read."" - Professor James R. Doty, Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery and Director and Founder of The Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, Stanford University School of Medicine" """Noel A. Cazenave brings his magnificent investigation of the evolution of kindness and the ways in which western culture and ideas have too often undermined it to a new threshold of relevance. He boldly engages the deep racial, class and economic divisions that the United States and the world must contend with in an urgent, wise and effective manner to olve the problems of in-group myopia that need to be wisely addressed in education and society. Kindness really is our greatest human asset. This book is immensely important for those who are wanting to couple kindness with the realism of hope rather than with the superficiality of dispositional optimism. It takes a great sociologist like Cazenave to lead the way forward into a new era. With this book he rises into the highest ranks of the great sociologists of kindness and altruistic love."" - Stephen G. Post, PhD, Professor and Director, Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care & Bioethics, Stony Brook University ""Noel Cazenave's Kindness Wars is a majestic work of political and social theory. Written in highly accessible language, it starts by surveying debates about human nature, moves through arguments in antiquity and then on to political theory as it developed in the early modern period and the enlightenment, culminating with a sustained analysis of current political scene. Throughout it unflagging sustains its original and highly inventive framing that kindness is contingent upon the social context in which individuals get to act (on their own and in solidarity with others). There are many take-aways including how the class-based nature of western capitalist societies poses a persistent constraint on people's ability to practice kindness. This book is written to be widely read and surely deserves to be."" - Sanford Schram, Professor of Political Science, Hunter College, City University of New York ""Through the unique lens of a conflict theoretical perspective, Dr. Cazenave explores not only the definition of kindness but also the question of what it means to be kind and whether to be kind at all. As he notes, the millennia old ""kindness theory"" permeates history defining what is a kind society. This volume is an intellectual tour de force reviewing the politically-engaged conceptualizations of kindness at the center of the Enlightenment-era and other Western political and economic debates giving us a far different perspective about human beings, possibilities and kindness then most are aware. Through this volume we have a roadmap to create a worldwide and enduring kindness revolution. A must read."" - Professor James R. Doty, Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery and Director and Founder of The Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, Stanford University School of Medicine ""Noel A. Cazenave brings his magnificent investigation of the evolution of kindness and the ways in which western culture and ideas have too often undermined it to a new threshold of relevance. He boldly engages the deep racial, class and economic divisions that the United States and the world must contend with in an urgent, wise and effective manner to solve the problems of in-group myopia that need to be wisely addressed in education and society. Kindness really is our greatest human asset. This book is immensely important for those who are wanting to couple kindness with the realism of hope rather than with the superficiality of dispositional optimism. It takes a great sociologist like Cazenave to lead the way forward into a new era. With this book he rises into the highest ranks of the great sociologists of kindness and altruistic love."" - Stephen G. Post, PhD, Professor and Director, Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care & Bioethics, Stony Brook University ""Noel Cazenave's Kindness Wars is a majestic work of political and social theory. Written in highly accessible language, it starts by surveying debates about human nature, moves through arguments in antiquity and then on to political theory as it developed in the early modern period and the enlightenment, culminating with a sustained analysis of the current political scene. Throughout it unflaggingly sustains its original and highly inventive framing that kindness is contingent upon the social context in which individuals get to act (on their own and in solidarity with others). There are many take-aways including how the class-based nature of western capitalist societies poses a persistent constraint on people's ability to practice kindness. This book is written to be widely read and surely deserves to be."" - Sanford Schram, Professor of Political Science, Hunter College, City University of New York ""Through the unique lens of a conflict theoretical perspective, Dr. Cazenave explores not only the definition of kindness but also the question of what it means to be kind and whether to be kind at all. As he notes, the millennia old ""kindness theory"" permeates history defining what is a kind society. This volume is an intellectual tour de force reviewing the politically-engaged conceptualizations of kindness at the center of the Enlightenment-era and other Western political and economic debates and giving us a far different perspective about human beings, possibilities and kindness then most are aware. Through this volume we have a roadmap to create a worldwide and enduring kindness revolution. A must read."" - Professor James R. Doty, Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery and Director and Founder of The Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, Stanford University School of Medicine" Noel A. Cazenave brings his magnificent investigation of the evolution of kindness and the ways in which western culture and ideas have too often undermined it to a new threshold of relevance. He boldly engages the deep racial, class and economic divisions that the United States and the world must contend with in an urgent, wise and effective manner to olve the problems of in-group myopia that need to be wisely addressed in education and society. Kindness really is our greatest human asset. This book is immensely important for those who are wanting to couple kindness with the realism of hope rather than with the superficiality of dispositional optimism. It takes a great sociologist like Cazenave to lead the way forward into a new era. With this book he rises into the highest ranks of the great sociologists of kindness and altruistic love. - Stephen G. Post, PhD, Professor and Director, Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care & Bioethics, Stony Brook University Noel Cazenave's Kindness Wars is a majestic work of political and social theory. Written in highly accessible language, it starts by surveying debates about human nature, moves through arguments in antiquity and then on to political theory as it developed in the early modern period and the enlightenment, culminating with a sustained analysis of current political scene. Throughout it unflagging sustains its original and highly inventive framing that kindness is contingent upon the social context in which individuals get to act (on their own and in solidarity with others). There are many take-aways including how the class-based nature of western capitalist societies poses a persistent constraint on people's ability to practice kindness. This book is written to be widely read and surely deserves to be. - Sanford Schram, Professor of Political Science, Hunter College, City University of New York Through the unique lens of a conflict theoretical perspective, Dr. Cazenave explores not only the definition of kindness but also the question of what it means to be kind and whether to be kind at all. As he notes, the millennia old kindness theory permeates history defining what is a kind society. This volume is an intellectual tour de force reviewing the politically-engaged conceptualizations of kindness at the center of the Enlightenment-era and other Western political and economic debates giving us a far different perspective about human beings, possibilities and kindness then most are aware. Through this volume we have a roadmap to create a worldwide and enduring kindness revolution. A must read. - Professor James R. Doty, Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery and Director and Founder of The Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, Stanford University School of Medicine Author InformationNoel A. Cazenave is Professor of Sociology at the University of Connecticut. In addition to his other books, numerous journal articles, book chapters, and various other publications, Professor Cazenave coauthored Welfare Racism: Playing the Race Card Against America’s Poor, which won five book awards, and has most recently published Killing African Americans: Police and Vigilante Violence as a Racial Control Mechanism. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |