We live in a culture of apology & forgiveness But while there are a few thinkers who are critical of forgiveness as being too supine & extol the virtues of retribution & 'getting even' philosopher & intellectual Martha C Nussbaum criticizes forgiveness from the other side that in the realm of personal relations forgiveness is at its heart inquisitorial & disciplinary In this volume based on her 2014 Locke Lectures Nussbaum paints a startling new portrait that strips the notion of forgiveness down to its Judeo-Christian roots where it was structured by the moral relationship between a score-keeping God & penitent self-abasing & erring mortals The relationship between a wronged human & another is she says based on this primary God-human relationship Nussbaum agrees with Nietzsche in seeing in forgiveness a displaced vindictiveness & a concealed resentment that are ungenerous & unhelpful in human relations She says forgiveness can give aid & comfort to a certain narcissism of resentment that a loving & generous person should eschew-in favor of a generosity that gets ahead of forgiveness & prevents its procedural thoughts from taking place With a wide range of literary & classical references as background Nussbaum pursues her penetrating & wide-ranging exploration of anger & forgiveness from the personal realm into the political as well as into a so-called middle realm where we interact with people & groups who are not our close friends or family A great deal of resentment toward others is in this middle realm & she argues that the Stoics were right-we should try & understand how petty most slights are & avoid anger to begin with