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Consider Ethics - Bruce Waller

Consider Ethics

Theory, Readings, and Contemporary Issues

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
368 Seiten
2010 | 3rd edition
Pearson (Verlag)
978-0-205-01773-7 (ISBN)
CHF 189,95 inkl. MwSt
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Offering a balance of theory and applications and a mix of text and readings, Consider Ethics begins with chapters covering ethical theory, each of which is followed by related, classical readings. The book concludes with an examination of six contemporary ethical issues presented in a pro/con format with introductory material that places each issue in context.

Featuring selections from the world’s most influential philosophers, this combination of primary texts and explanatory pedagogy presents the material in a clear, accessible way that does not sacrifice rigor. Making connections among different ethical theories throughout, the text helps students to engage the subject matter and apply theories to important contemporary ethical issues.

In This Section: I. Author Bio II. Author Letter I. Author Bio Dr. Bruce N. Waller is Chair of the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Youngstown State University. He received his Ph.D. in 1979 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His other works include Consider Ethics: Theory, Readings, and Contemporary Issues, Critical Thinking: Consider the Verdict, You Decide! Current Debates in Criminal Justice, You Decide! Current Debates in Contemporary Moral Problems, You Decide! Current Debates in Introductory Philosophy, You Decide! Current Debates in Ethics, and Coffee and Philosophy: A Conversational Introduction to Philosophy with Readings. II. Author Letter Dear Colleague, Consider Ethics is based on the belief that undergraduate students from widely divergent backgrounds and levels of preparation can understand, appreciate, and benefit from the best and most insightful work on ethical theory. My students at Youngstown State University have provided solid evidence to substantiate that belief: they arrive at YSU from rough inner city schools, richly-funded suburban schools, and grossly underfunded rural schools. They come from the Appalachian region of southern Ohio and West Virginia, from the coal mining districts of Pennsylvania, and from the rust belt cities of northeast Ohio and they represent every ethnic group that arrived in Youngstown to work in the steel mills. They come together to examine, explore and debate ethical theories, to share perspectives and insights, and to learn with and from one another. They demonstrate, year after year, that they are fully capable of the careful study of ethical theory, that they find the subject fascinating, and that they not only gain richer perspectives on ethics and a deeper understanding of their own views, but also make significant gains in their philosophical abilities and in their self-confidence for tackling difficult subjects. It is the success and the insights of those students that inspired this book, and that has guided the development of new editions. Ethical theory is not an esoteric mystery, but instead the rigorous development of ideas and views that people of all ages, cultures, and backgrounds find fascinating. It is a subject of important historical insights, exciting contemporary developments, challenging arguments, and deep disagreements. The study of ethical study enables students to view contemporary ethical debates from new perspectives and different angles – often allowing them space and freedom to re-evaluate their beliefs on specific ethical issues. What remains from earlier editions is the overall style and structure of the text: the major approaches to ethical theory, from classical to contemporary, are presented in an accessible conversational style, together with representative passages from major theorists. Every chapter includes challenging questions for reflection and discussion that pose difficult quandaries, avoid easy answers, and push students to think hard and reflectively about their own conclusions. In the 3rd Edition, there are new exercises for every chapter, a number of new readings (both classical and contemporary), new boxed quotations, examples and questions. There are new specific debates on the question of performance-enhancing drugs as well as the issue of police use of deceptive interrogation practices, as well as new sections on value pluralism and on sentimentalism. All of the new material has been tested on my own long-suffering students, who have been wonderfully frank in telling me what material does – and does not – work. I would be delighted to hear from anyone reviewing, teaching, or studying this book, and am always happy to receive suggestions for improvements as well as new exercises for reflection and analysis. My email is bnwaller@ysu.edu. Cheers, Bruce N. Waller Youngstown State University

1. Thinking About Ethics.

Ethics and Critical Thinking.

Studying Ethics.

God's Commandments and Ethics.

Religion and Ethics.

Reading: Plato, Euthyphro.

Exercises
2. Ethics and Reason.

Reasoning about Ethics.

Elements of Kantian Ethics.

Criticisms of Kantian Ethics.

Conclusion.

Reading: Kant, Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals.

Exercises
3. Ethics and Emotions.

Follow Your Reason or Follow Your Heart?

Objective and Subjective Feelings.

Intuitionism.

Conclusion.

Reading: Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature.

Exercises
4. Utilitarian Ethics.

Utilitarian Theory.

Act- vs. Rule-Utilitarians.

Utiliatarians and the Quality of Pleasures.

Criticisms of Utilitarian Ethics.

Nozick’s Challenge to Utilitarian Ethics

The Uses of Utilitarian Ethics.

Opposition to Utilitarianism.

Reading: Bentham, An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation.

Reading: Mill, What Utilitarianism Is.
Exercises

5. Social Contract Ethics.

Framing the Social Contract.

Fairness and Social Contract Theory: John Rawls.

Gauthier's Contractarian Ethics.

The Social Contract Myth and its Underlying Assumptions.

Conclusion.

Reading: Hobbes, Leviathan.

Exercises
6. Egoism, Relativism, and Pragmatism.

Egoism.

Relativism.

Pragmatism.

Readings: Rorty, Philosophy and Social Hope.

Exercises
7. Virtue Ethics.

The Distinctive Focus of Virtue Ethics.

The Strengths of Virtue Ethics.

Criticisms of Virtue Theory.

Virtue Theory and Medicine.

Reading: Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics.

Exercises
8. Care Ethics.

The Neglect of Women's Ethical Views.

The Care Perspectives on Ethics.

Women and Ethics.

Reading: Baier, The Need for More than Justice.

Exercises
9. The Scope of Morality.

Who is Due Moral Consideration?

Moral Agents.

Darwin and the Moral Status of Nonhuman Animals.

Reading: Darwin, The Descent of Man.

Reading: Frans de Waal, Primates and Philosophers.

Exercises

10. Ethical NonObjectivism.

The Nature of Ethical Nonobjectivism.

Arguments for Ethical Nonobjectivism.

The Continuing Struggle Between Objectivists and Nonobjectivists.

Reading: Ayer, Language, Truth, and Logic.

Exercises
11. Moral Realism.

Contemporary Moral Realism.

Moral Realism and the Argument from Simplicity.

Moral Facts and Scientific Revolutions.

Two Ways that Moral Realism Might Fail.

Reading: Smith, Realism.

Exercises
12. How Hard is Ethics?

The Demands of Ethical Living.

Comparing Ethical Systems on the Basis of Difficulty.

Duty and Feelings.

Reading: Mencius, Book of Mencius.

Exercises
13. Free Will.

Determinism.

Fatalism.

Determinism and Free Will.

Libertarian Free Will and the Rejection of Determinism.

Reading: Wolf, Asymmetrical Freedom.

Exercises
14. Freedom, Moral Responsibility, and Ethics.

Types of Responsibility.

Moral Responsibility and the Utility of Punishment.

Conditions for Moral Responsibility.

Moral Responsibility and Ethics.

Conclusion.

Reading: Nagel, Moral Luck.

Exercises.

15. The Death Penalty.

The Death Penalty Should Be Abolished – Stephen Bright

The Death Penalty is Morally Legitimate – Louis Pojman

Exercises

16. Abortion

Abortion is Immoral – Don Marquis

Most Abortions Are Morally Legitimate – Bonnie Steinbock

17: Animal Rights

Nonhuman animals have no basic rights – Richard Posner

Nonhuman Animals Have Important rights – Peter Singer

Exercises

18: Homosexual Sex

Homosexual sex is wrong -- John Finnis

Homosexual relations are morally legitimate -- John Corvino

Exercises

19: What Are Our Global Obligations to the Impoverished?

We have a limited moral obligation to help impoverished people in other countries -- Thomas Nagel

We have a very strong moral obligation to help impoverished people in other countries -- Thomas Pogge

Exercises

20: Can Terrorism Ever Be Justified?

Terrorism is always wrong -- Tony Coady

Terrorism might sometimes be justified -- Gabriel Palmer-Fernandez

Exercises

Glossary

Credits

Index

Sprache englisch
Maße 203 x 249 mm
Gewicht 712 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Ethik
Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Allgemeines / Lexika
Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Bildungstheorie
ISBN-10 0-205-01773-8 / 0205017738
ISBN-13 978-0-205-01773-7 / 9780205017737
Zustand Neuware
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