The robust demands of the good : ethics with attachment, virtue, and respect

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Tác giả: Philip Pettit

Ngôn ngữ: eng

ISBN-10: 0198732600

ISBN-13: 978-0198732600

Ký hiệu phân loại: 170 Ethics (Moral philosophy)

Thông tin xuất bản:

Mô tả vật lý: x, 281 pages ; , 23 cm

Bộ sưu tập: Tâm lý, Logic

ID: 348547

 "Some goods that we generate for others, as when we give them attention or help or encouragement, require us to provide that benefit under the actual circumstances where we interact. Other goods that we generate require not just that we actually provide that sort of benefit but that we are also poised to provide it, even should actual circumstances change in various ways. These goods demand robust and not merely actual beneficence. Thus to give you friendship I must be robustly, not just accidentally, attentive to your needs
  to give you a virtue like honesty I must be robustly disposed to tell you the truth
  and to give you respect I must be robustly committed to showing restraint in my dealings with you. In this original contribution to normative ethics, Philip Pettit charts the range of robustly demanding goods, building on his earlier work on the robust demands of freedom. He explores the rationale behind our concern for being able to rely on others to treat us well, not just for being lucky enough to enjoy good treatment. And then he traces the implications for ethics of giving a central place to robustly demanding goods. The lessons he draws teach us that there is a tighter connection between being good and doing good than is generally recognized
  that it is harder to count as doing good than it is to count as doing evil
  and that there is a serious issue, ignored in many ethical theories, about the basis on which we should deliberate in day-to-day decisions about what it is right to do. The book amounts to a radical rethinking of ethics in which many standard positions shift or fall. The association between being good and doing good casts doubt on the orthodox dichotomy between evaluating agents and evaluating actions. The calibration between doing good and doing evil explains the Knobe effect, so called, as well as explaining the superficial appeal of doctrines like that of double effect. And the investigation of how to be guided in deliberating about the right reduces the gap between the recommendations of approaches like Kantianism, contractualism, and virtue theory and their common, consequentialist foe."-- Publisher's website
Includes bibliographical references (pages 263-272) and indexes
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