Open Access
Francis Hutcheson on Shame
Author(s) -
А.В. Прокофьев
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ètičeskaâ myslʹ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2074-4897
pISSN - 2074-4870
DOI - 10.21146/2074-4870-2021-21-1-88-105
Subject(s) - shame , honour , virtue , morality , epistemology , philosophy , dignity , moral psychology , psychoanalysis , moral disengagement , sociology , social psychology , psychology , law , political science
The paper analyzes the conception of shame of the British sentimentalist Francis Hutcheson. It rests on the understanding of moral virtue as a representation of benevolence and the identification of shame with the misery from the unfavorable opinions of others. For Hutcheson, shame complements honour as a second part of the particular human capacity that linked to the moral sense. In ‘An Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue’, Hutcheson is arguing with Bernard Mandeville about the role of shame and honour in the genesis of morality. He tries to show that the general approval of benevolence and the love of public good cannot be born out of self-love and a sensitivity to public opinion. He uses three arguments: a) shame is an immediate evil, b) shame is inseparable from the moral sense, b) their link is independent from public opinion. In addition, Hutcheson demonstrates that the sense of honour and shame can deviate from the moral sense in particular instances via some associations. Hutcheson’ attitude to these deviations is uncertain and ambivalent. In ‘A System of Moral Philosophy’, honour and shame accompany not only the moral sense but also the sense of decency and dignity. This treatise also contains a brief polemics with Aristotle on the role of emotions generated by opinions of others in the process of moral self-improvement. Hutcheson’s conception of shame is a step in the development of socialized interpretation of this emotion. Theoretically, it is interesting as an attempt to analyze origins of the particular lists of subjects of shame.