Freshly Printed - allow 7 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
Three Methods of Ethics
A Debate
Marcia W. Baron (Author), Philip Pettit (Author), Michael A. Slote (Author)
9780631194347, Wiley
Hardback, published 30 October 1997
296 pages
23.7 x 16 x 2.7 cm, 0.595 kg
"An unprecedented three-way conversation between forceful representatives of the three major traditions in ethical philosophy." Stephen Darwall, University of Michigan "An outstanding resource: a book which students beginning to think about normative ethical theory, and their teachers, simply must read." Michael Smith, Australian National University "This is a superb book by three moral philosophers who really know their stuff; lively, lucid and highly engaging." John Fischer, University of California, Riverside "This book, which brings together leading protagonists of the three approaches to ethics currently dominant, is definitely one of the best in ethics for 1997. It will provide any reader (whether student, teacher, or 'researcher') with not only an excellent 'big picture' of this important area of debate, but also much philosophical detail to chew over." Steven Tudor, University of Melbourne, Australasian Journal of Philosophy
During the past decade ethical theory has been in a lively state of development, and three basic approaches to ethics - Kantian ethics, consequentialism, and virtue ethics - have assumed positions of particular prominence.
Introduction Part I: Kantian Ethics 1. Introduction 2. Consequentalism versus Kantian Ethics 3. Kantian Ethics and Virtue Ethics 4. Further Objections to Kantian Ethics Part II: The Consequentialist Perspective 5. A Moral Psychology for Consequentialists and Non-consequentialists 6. The Question of Rightness 7. Different Answers to the Question of Rightness 8. In Favour of the Consequentialist Answer to the Question of Rightness 9. The Tenability of the Consequentialist Answer Part III: Virtue Ethics 10. What is Virtue Ethics? 11. Theory versus Anti-theory 12. Virtue Ethics versus Kantian and Common-sense Morality 13. Common-sense Virtue Ethics versus Consequentialism 14. Further Aspects of Common-sense virtual Ethics 15. Making Sense of Agent-based Virtue Ethics 16. Morality as Inner Strength 17. Morality as Universal Benevolence 18. Morality as Caring 19. Agent-basing and Applied Ethics 20. Conclusion: Comparisons within Virtue Ethics Part IV: Reply to Pettit and Slote 21. Reply to Pettit 22. Reply to Stote Part V: Reply to Baron and Stote 23. Rival Theories? 24. Comment on Slote 25. Comment on Baron Part VI: Reply to Baron and Pettit 26. Reply to Baron 27. Reply to Pettit 28. Virtue Politics
Marcia Baron
Philip Pettit
Michael Slote
Marcia Baron
Phillip Pettit
Michael Slote
Subject Areas: Society & culture: general [JF]
