NEU

Hanhui Xu - Adult Children's Filial Obligations to Their Parents

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Über das Buch

– in englischer Sprache –

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Filial obligations are usually considered as being children’s moral obligations to promote their parents’ wellbeing — for example, by offering assistance to parents when they are in need and accompanying parents when requested to do so.

In the last few decades, more and more attention has been paid to questions related to filial obligations, especially the questions of what are adult children`s filial obligations, why do adult children normally have filial obligations and what do these filial obligations require. Existing theories about filial obligations differ from each other on these issues.

There are six main accounts of filial obligations which are the rule-utilitarian account, the Kantian beneficence account, the friendship account, the narrow debt account, the special goods account and the gratitude account. In the book, I argue for the gratitude account of filial obligations which makes use of a model of gratitude, according to which A owes gratitude to B for the benefits A obtained from B, to argue that in the parent-child relationship parents are benefactors and children are beneficiaries. Thus, filial obligations are adult children’s duty of gratitude to their parents.

However, the gratitude account faces a couple of challenges. The first one concerns the benefits that ground adult children’s filial obligations. There are two apparent types of benefit that might be relevant: the life parents give to their children and the benefits they bestow on their children during their upbringing. However, one view treats life as morally neutral and thus should not be seen as a benefit. Another perspective holds that raising children is a duty that parents must fulfill, known as the parental duty. Accordingly, actions performed in the fulfillment of duty do not require gratitude. Following this logic, in the parent-child relationship, if a person has a parental duty, and he only did what his duty required him to do, no gratitude is…

Schlagworte

Familienethik, Eltern-Kind-Beziehung, Kindespflicht, Elterliche Pflicht, Dankbarkeit, Freundschaft, Ethik, Philosophie, Family Ethics, Parent-child relationship, Filial obligation, Parental duty, Gratitude, Friendship, Special goods, Ethics, Philosophy

Angaben zur Produktsicherheit

Hersteller
Verlag Dr. Kovac GmbH
Leverkusenstraße 13, 22761 Hamburg

E-Mail
info@verlagdrkovac.de

  • Autor*in
    Hanhui Xu
  • Seiten
    214
  • Zusatzinfos
    – in englischer Sprache –
  • Jahr
    Hamburg 2025
  • ISBN
    978-3-339-14274-0
  • Schriftenreihe
    Ethik in Forschung und Praxis
  • ISSN
    1610-5966
  • Band
    24
  • Fachbereich
    Geisteswissenschaft

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