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The Bourgeois Virtues: Ethics for an Age of Commerce

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index 601Horkheimer, Max: on solidarity, 142Hornby, Nick: defines eros, 92; private property,466, 468Horowitz, D<strong>an</strong>iel: clerisy <strong>an</strong>d consumption,451Horowitz, Joel: prudence-only <strong>an</strong>d moralsentiments, 548n10Horst, H<strong>an</strong> v<strong>an</strong> der: Gressh<strong>of</strong> poem, 521n11Houser, R. E.: quoting Albert the Great oncardinal virtues, 540n11 (chap. 26); quotingAquinas on courage, 531n7; quotingAristotle on courage <strong>of</strong> lower classes,537n36Hoxby, Bri<strong>an</strong>: ethics <strong>an</strong>d decoration <strong>of</strong> theAmsterdam city hall, 291Hugh <strong>of</strong> St. Victor: on commerce, 61Hughes, Robert: on Catal<strong>an</strong> prudence,259–260Huisken, Jacobine: on the Royal Palace onthe Dam, 539n1Huizinga, Joh<strong>an</strong>: “bourgeois” as contemptuous,79; <strong>for</strong>eign aristocrats <strong>an</strong>dDutch bourgeoisie, 293; Holl<strong>an</strong>d bourgeois,80hum<strong>an</strong> capital: bourgeois idea <strong>of</strong> skill, 32, 77;d<strong>an</strong>gers to, 34, 50; inherit<strong>an</strong>ce <strong>an</strong>d, 163<strong>an</strong>d chap. 45; large rise, 502; rise evidentfrom share <strong>of</strong> labor, 555n14; Schultzinvents, 78Hume, David: advocates bal<strong>an</strong>ce <strong>of</strong> virtues,8; artificial virtues, 305, 310; Baier <strong>an</strong>dfeminine side <strong>of</strong>, 311; competition <strong>of</strong>neighbors, 41–42; deriving “ought” from“is,” 264–265; Dialogues Concerning NaturalReligion, <strong>an</strong>ti-Christi<strong>an</strong> bomb, 164;Hampshire on, 347; <strong>an</strong>d K<strong>an</strong>t, 266, 267;moral sentiments, 154; origin <strong>of</strong>appetites, 420, 422, 459; S variablesbehind P, 420; Smith <strong>an</strong>d, 367; theorist<strong>of</strong> the bourgeoisie, 305, 414; <strong>an</strong>d tr<strong>an</strong>scendence,306;humility: <strong>an</strong>swers to great-souledness, 185; inbusiness, 191; extended <strong>an</strong>alysis <strong>of</strong>,184–191; in literary reading, 190; Mill onself-abnegation in women, 188; not <strong>an</strong>eurosis, 188; part <strong>of</strong> temper<strong>an</strong>ce, 185; inscience, 190; self-abnegation, 187–189; St.Catherine prideful, 187; <strong>an</strong>d Uriah Heep,188–189; <strong>an</strong>d women, 188Hunnicutt, Benjamin: history <strong>of</strong> leisure inAmerica, 461Hunt, Lester: gift, 432; market supports selfrespect,31Huntington, Collis: bribery, 493Hursthouse, Rosalind: character developmentin Western ethics, 387; contingencyin ethical scene, 279; dimensions <strong>of</strong>virtue <strong>of</strong> virtues, 246; <strong>for</strong>mulas <strong>for</strong>ethics, 271, 353; on hope <strong>an</strong>d faith, 167;narrative in ethics, 275–276; on prudence,256; stories such as those in <strong>The</strong>Book <strong>of</strong> Knowledge, 542n25; using virtueethics, 270; virtue ethicist, 92;Hurston, Zora Neale, <strong>The</strong>ir Eyes Were Watching:<strong>an</strong>d rhetoric, 228Hutcheson, Fr<strong>an</strong>cis: moral sentiments, 154Hutchinson, Charles: <strong>an</strong>d Art Institute, 175I<strong>an</strong>naccone, Lawrence: economics <strong>of</strong> religion,543n17Ibsen, Henrik: <strong>an</strong>d bourgeoisie, 157Icel<strong>an</strong>dic sagas: Gunnar as Odysseus, 204;Gunnar’s intemper<strong>an</strong>ce, 245; sagas nothistory, 213identity, faithfulness, 154idolatry, consequence <strong>of</strong> pride, 102Ignatieff, Michael: connection/autonomy,310; on Lear, 404; religion perishing, 183;Rom<strong>an</strong>ticism’s good, 528n26; ed., Wealth<strong>an</strong>d Virtue, used throughoutIliad: eloquence in, 223; model <strong>for</strong> bourgeoismen, 213, 216, 244; Weil on, 204Immortality Test, 125inauthenticity <strong>of</strong> bourgeoisie, 69; Sartre <strong>an</strong>d,297–299, 507India: capitalism in, 14, 443–444; castes, 287;early Buddhism <strong>an</strong>d bourgeoisie, 390,443; famines <strong>an</strong>d democracy, 46; licenseRaj in, 21; South Asi<strong>an</strong> Christi<strong>an</strong>s,342–343individualism: old in Engl<strong>an</strong>d; in U. S., 142.See also Bellah, Robert; Macfarl<strong>an</strong>e, Al<strong>an</strong>Ingalls, D. H. H.: tr<strong>an</strong>slation <strong>of</strong> Vidyākara,442Inglehart, Ronald: religious values worldwide,554n18Ingram, Paul: friendship in business, 156Innes, Stephen: sociology <strong>of</strong> seventeenthcenturyMassachusetts, 528n31Inoue, Kyoko: “individual dignity” in modernJap<strong>an</strong>, 296–297integrity, faithfulness, 154, 390; charted, 66

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