Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Zone Morality [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 136 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x155 mm, kaal: 321 g
  • Sari: Categories
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Jun-2014
  • Kirjastus: De Gruyter
  • ISBN-10: 3110351927
  • ISBN-13: 9783110351927
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 136 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x155 mm, kaal: 321 g
  • Sari: Categories
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Jun-2014
  • Kirjastus: De Gruyter
  • ISBN-10: 3110351927
  • ISBN-13: 9783110351927
Teised raamatud teemal:
Traditional moral theory usually has either of two emphases: virtuous moral character or principles for distributing duties and goods. Zone Morality introduces a third focus: families and businesses are systems created by the causal reciprocities of their members. These relations embody the duties and permissions of a systems moral code. Core systems satisfy basic interests and needs; we move easily among them hardly noticing that moral demands vary from system to system. Moral conflicts arise because of discord within or among systems but also because morality has three competing sites: self-assertive, self-regarding people; the moral codes of systems; and regulative principles that enhance social cohesion. Each wants authority to control the other two. Their struggles make governance fragile. A strong church or authoritarian government reduces conflict by imposing its rules, but democracy resists that solution. Procedural democracy is a default position. Its laws and equitable procedures defend people or systems having diverse interests when society fails to create a public that would govern for the common interest.
Introduction 1(3)
1 Morality and Metaphysics
4(25)
1.1 Metaphysical assumptions
4(1)
1.2 Ideology or theory
5(2)
1.3 Systems
7(2)
1.4 Causation
9(1)
1.5 Causal reciprocities and moral codes
10(3)
1.6 Formation and demise
13(1)
1.7 Normativity
14(2)
1.8 Degrees of commitment
16(1)
1.9 Alternative accounts
17(9)
1.10 Excessive abstraction
26(1)
1.11 Other goods
27(2)
2 Character
29(19)
2.1 Semantics
29(1)
2.2 Character's formation
29(1)
2.3 Idiosyncrasy
30(2)
2.4 Oversight
32(3)
2.5 Initiative and cultivation
35(3)
2.6 Virtues and skills
38(6)
2.7 Character or personality
44(1)
2.8 Autonomous or submissive
44(1)
2.9 Coherence
45(3)
3 Moral experience
48(21)
3.1 Ambiguities
48(2)
3.2 Social balance, moral health
50(2)
3.3 Strategies for achieving balance
52(1)
3.4 Balance qualified
53(4)
3.5 Moral discord
57(3)
3.6 Moral compromise
60(2)
3.7 Moral education
62(2)
3.8 Judgment
64(2)
3.9 Competence
66(3)
4 Regulation
69(8)
4.1 Who regulates?
69(2)
4.2 Which matters need regulation?
71(1)
4.3 Cross-currents
71(2)
4.4 Obstacles to regulation
73(2)
4.5 Dissonance
75(2)
5 Politics
77(21)
5.1 Two problem-solving alternatives
77(3)
5.2 Practical politics
80(1)
5.3 Rational discourse
81(1)
5.4 Procedural democracy
82(2)
5.5 Networks and coalitions
84(1)
5.6 Factionalism
84(2)
5.7 Negotiation
86(1)
5.8 An unstable dialectic
87(4)
5.9 A flawed ontology
91(3)
5.10 An imperfect balance
94(4)
6 Justification
98(29)
6.1 What does justification achieve? How is it achieved?
98(9)
6.2 Consequentialism
107(4)
6.3 Well-being
111(1)
6.4 Transformation or management?
111(2)
6.5 Moral vulnerabilities
113(2)
6.6 Moral quandaries and confusions
115(6)
6.7 All-in-one moral solutions
121(4)
6.8 Irresolution
125(2)
Bibliography 127(2)
Name index 129
David Weissman, City College of New York, U.S.A.