Self-Governance and Cooperation
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 23 September 1999
- ISBN 9780198238393
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages192 pages
- Size 223x145x16 mm
- Weight 347 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Robert Myers presents an original moral theory which charts a course between the extremes of consequentialism and contractualism, portraying morality not simply as a matter of promoting the overall good but rather as a matter of cooperating in its promotion. This gives him answers to two of the most vexing questions in moral philosophy: how can increasing general welfare and respecting individual rights be equally fundamental features of moral activity, and what gives morality's demands their special character of inescapability?
MoreLong description:
Robert Myers presents an original moral theory which charts a course between the extremes of consequentialism and contractualism. He puts forward a radically new case for the existence of both agent-neutral and agent-relative values, and gives an innovative answer to the question how such disparate values can be weighed against each other. Practical judgement is shown to be guided in this by two very different ideals: an ideal of cooperation, which is held to shape the content of morality's demands, and one of self-governance, which is held to determine the nature of reason's requirements. Examination of the ideal of cooperation reveals that principles of impartial beneficence and rights protecting individual freedoms are equally fundamental to morality. Examination of the ideal of self-governance reveals that morality's dictates, though not necessarily overriding, are always in an important sense inescapable. The result is a theory of morality which combines a balanced account of its content with a ringing affirmation of its authority.
This deft and confident book asks the big questions, and is full of ideas about how they might best be approached, if not finally answered. It is an important contribution to the whole subject.
Table of Contents:
Introduction: Two Problems in Moral Philosophy
Misgivings about Consequentialism and Contractualism
Cooperating to Promote the Good
Initial Counter-Arguments Supporting Value Monism
Self-Governance and Value Dualism
Conclusion: Implications for the Question of Morality's Authority
References; Index