Project Description
This is a project on the history of the idea and practice of care
in the Western world. Few ideas are more crucial for understanding
the needs of the human condition in the world of today; yet few
ideas have such a rich but virtually unknown history. The goal of
the Project is to report on and interpret the antecedents of today's
notions of care, compare them with contemporary ideas and practices
of care with special attention to their moral aspects, and indicate
the practical and theoretical implications of care for the
professions and public life.
In December of 2000 the Lilly Endowment awarded Professor Warren
T. Reich of Georgetown University a major grant to complete the
research, principally by engaging research associates to dig out
information on care that has never before been assembled and
coordinated. The research is being done by Professor Reich and his
staff, as well as by leading scholars from all fields of learning in
all parts of the world. The initial products of the Project will be
the publication of the history of care in three volumes, under the
overall title of Care: A History of the Idea and Its Practice. The
purpose of this series is to attempt to alter our way of thinking
and acting in the area of care based on insights from the past;
develop an archive of historical materials on the meaning and
practice of care; and produce other monographs and articles.
So far, Professor Reich is being assisted by about 75
researchers. The Project is examining care thematically -- not just
solicitous care, but all ideas of care in all settings and in many
different kinds of texts: in mythology, literature, religion,
theology, philosophy, psychology, sociology, ethics, etc. It also
examines those ideas/practices that have been the equivalent of, or
ingredient in, what we now call care, but which in previous eras
were denoted by other terms such as mercy, philanthropy, and
hospitality.
The multi-disciplinary character of the Project is evident, for
example, in the way in which it juxtaposes and compares ideas of
care in sources as diverse as Greco-Roman and continental
philosophy; pastoral care in medieval theological and contemporary
psychological contexts; hospitality in Islamic, Byzantine, and
Western thought; writings of women mystics and contemporary
economists; and contemporary feminist and utilitarian notions of
care. Practical dimensions of care are explored in the following
areas: social welfare care and social work; medical and nursing
care; public health care; care of souls and pastoral care;
education; pharmacy and the pharmaceutical industry; business,
management, and leadership; and the environment.
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