Kristjan Kristjansson is the author of Social Freedom: The Responsibility View (1996) and Justifying Emotions: Pride and Jealousy (2002) as well as various papers about morality, emotions and education in international journals.
'KristjA!n KristjA!nsson has written a splendid book on education by way of understanding Aristotle and his treatment of the emotions and their cultivation. His analysis is insightful and well worth reading regarding any one of its three components, education, or Aristotle, or the emotions, but he artfully weaves the three themes together, always keeping in mind the central educational aims of the book. My own interest was especially peaked by his extended treatment and criticism of the mantra of 'emotional intelligence', with apt contrasts with Aristotle's much more impressive development of the idea that emotions are cognitively rich, steeped in ethics, teachable, trainable, and self-cultivatable. His discussion of anger (why one ought to teach justified anger in the classroom), for example, is both excellent and persuasive.' Robert C. Solomon, University of Texas at Austin, USA 'One of the most exciting recent developments in ethical theory has been the revival of an Aristotelian approach to understanding moral agency and association focused on the study of virtue and character. There can also be little doubt that his pioneering work in a wide range of prestigious philosophical and educational journals has established Professor KristjA!n KristjA!nsson as a leader in the field of serious attempts to apply contemporary Aristotelian and virtue ethical scholarship to problems of educational philosophy and moral education. In this light, this welcome new exploration from Professor KristjA!nsson of the diverse educational implications of Aristotle and virtue ethics clearly represents a major contribution to contemporary philosophy of education.' David Carr, University of Edinburgh 'KristjA!nsson's book is well written... An especially strong interest in Aristotle or Aristotelian scholarship is not necessary to gain something from this study and the chapters on current philosophy of education are, I think, especially informative and interesting even if read indepen