
The Virtue of Forgiveness
Adam Green(Editor)
Oxford University Press Inc
Will be published approx. on 7. July 2026
Book
Hardback
392 pages
978-0-19-775243-2 (ISBN)
Description
Forgiveness is at one and the same time a very ordinary and quite challenging moral phenomenon. It is expected of children as a part of their moral development and of our moral exemplars. At the same time, we debate whether we could or even should forgive in certain circumstances. It is deeply personal, but also important to attempt to affect social and political healing.
The Virtue of Forgiveness brings a diverse set of concerns to bear on forgiveness and forgiveness seeking. The chapters include insights from neuroscience, speech act theory, psychological research on both victims and perpetrators, social science, legal anthropology, holistic measures of health, interdisciplinary approaches to theology, the study of forgiveness tropes in literature, the philosophy of human action, and the study of value. Comprehensive reviews and conceptual arguments are complemented by case studies and data-driven hypothesis testing. The volume provides a singularly rich interdisciplinary conversation about forgiveness that covers traditional topics in the moral psychology of forgiveness while exploring new territory and incorporating new disciplinary voices.
As these essays illustrate, forgiveness is vitally important to our mental and physical health, to our agency, and to the social structures that promote reconciliation in the face of conflict at different social scales. It is an especially apt subject for multi-disciplinary engagement, and this collection provides a representative sample of projects in the existing dialogue between psychology and philosophy while broadening the disciplines represented to include neuroscience, anthropology, social science, literature, and theology.
The Virtue of Forgiveness brings a diverse set of concerns to bear on forgiveness and forgiveness seeking. The chapters include insights from neuroscience, speech act theory, psychological research on both victims and perpetrators, social science, legal anthropology, holistic measures of health, interdisciplinary approaches to theology, the study of forgiveness tropes in literature, the philosophy of human action, and the study of value. Comprehensive reviews and conceptual arguments are complemented by case studies and data-driven hypothesis testing. The volume provides a singularly rich interdisciplinary conversation about forgiveness that covers traditional topics in the moral psychology of forgiveness while exploring new territory and incorporating new disciplinary voices.
As these essays illustrate, forgiveness is vitally important to our mental and physical health, to our agency, and to the social structures that promote reconciliation in the face of conflict at different social scales. It is an especially apt subject for multi-disciplinary engagement, and this collection provides a representative sample of projects in the existing dialogue between psychology and philosophy while broadening the disciplines represented to include neuroscience, anthropology, social science, literature, and theology.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
599 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-775243-2 (9780197752432)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Adam Green
The Virtue of Forgiveness
Book
approx. 09/2026
Oxford University Press Inc
€35.50
Not yet published
Person
Adam Green is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oklahoma. He works in virtue theory, social epistemology, and the philosophy of religion, and he has published over thirty articles in such venues as the Journal of Philosophy, American Philosophical Quarterly, and Episteme. He wrote The Social Contexts of Intellectual Virtue and co-edited the book Hidden Divinity and Religious Belief with Eleonore Stump.
Editor
Associate Professor of PhilosophyAssociate Professor of Philosophy, University of Oklahoma
Content
- Introduction
- Part I. What Happens When We Forgive?
- 1: Brandon Warmke: What Do We Do When We Say "I Forgive You"?
- 2: Lindsey Root Luna and Charlotte V. O. Witvliet: The Neuroscience of Forgiveness: Genetics, Cardiac Regulation, and Neurological Correlates
- Part II. Remorse and Forgiveness Seeking
- 3: Blake Riek: Apology and Atonement: Psychological Research on Forgiveness Seeking
- 4: Anthony Bash: Remorse, Regret, and Forgiveness
- Part III. Forgiveness, Character, and Human Agency
- 5: Ishtiyaque Haji: Freedom, Forgiveness, and Normative Replacement
- 6: Adam Green: Hope, Humility, and Forgiveness
- Part IV. Forgiveness in Different Cultural Contexts
- 7: John D. Brewer and Bernadette C. Hayes: Victimhood, Forgiveness, and Reconciliation: Northern Ireland as a Case Study
- 8: Arzoo Osanloo: Working to Cultivate Forgiveness: Social Practices, Religious Mores, and Law in Action
- 9: JĂșlio Rique and Cleonice Camino: Theory and Research in Brazil on the Moral Development of Forgiveness
- Part V. The Value of Forgiveness
- 10: Matthew J. Smith: A Poetics of Forgiveness: Tragic and Post-Tragic Recognition
- 11: Loren L. Toussaint, Sebastian Binyamin Skalski-Bednarz and Janusz Surzykiewicz: Forgiveness and Flourishing: Understanding Definitions, Models, Evidence, and Methods
- 12: Eleonore Stump: The Good of Forgiveness