The Philosophy Of Loyalty
English


LOOKING TO PLACE A BULK ORDER?CLICK HERE

Piracy-free
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Secure Transactions
Fast Delivery
Fast Delivery
Sustainably Printed
Sustainably Printed
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.

About The Book

Josiah Royce in his 1908 book The Philosophy of Loyalty presented the idea that loyalty is a virtue indeed a primary virtue the heart of all the virtues the central duty amongst all the duties. Royce presents loyalty which he defines at length as the basic moral principle from which all other principles can be derived. The short definition that he gives of the idea is that loyalty is the willing and practical and thoroughgoing devotion of a person to a cause. The cause has to be an objective one. It cannot be ones personal self. It is something external to oneself that one looks outward to the world to find and that cannot be found within. It concerns not ones own person but other people. The devotion is active a surrendering of ones self-will to the cause that one loves. Moreover according to Royce loyalty is social. Loyalty to a cause unites the many fellow-servants of that cause binding them together in their service. Richard P. Mullin professor of Philosophy at Wheeling Jesuit University describes the three words willing and practical and thoroughgoing as packed with meaning. Loyalty is willing in that it is freely given not coerced. It is chosen after personal consideration not something that one is born into. Loyalty is practical in that it is practiced. It is actively engaged upon not passively expressed merely as a strong feeling about something. Loyalty is thoroughgoing in that it is not merely a casual interest but a wholehearted commitment to a cause.. From this definition Royce constructs a moral framework based upon loyalty using the notion of loyalty to loyalty itself. In order to do so Royce distinguishes good causes from evil causes by defining good causes as those that promote loyalty to loyalty. In other words loyalty to such a cause enables promotes or otherwise furthers the abilities of other people to be loyal to their causes. A cause that destroys the object of someone elses legitimate loyalty cannot be good. From this can be derived the virtues of truthfulness justice benevolence and courtesy. Royce himself relates this to business ethics: In the commercial world honesty in business is a service not merely and not mainly to the others who are parties to the single transaction in which at any one time this faithfulness is shown. The single act of business fidelity is an act of confidence of man in man upon which the whole fabric of business rests.
downArrow

Details