ABSTRACT

Nothing is more difficult today than deciding what to do about abortion, gay marriage, economic injustice, war, torture, global warming, euthanasia, capital punishment, and a host of other controversies, particularly in a world in which people of varying religious, cultural, and ethnic backgrounds commonly live side by side. Can we draw on the wisdom of the past to address these contemporary ethical dilemmas? Can we see more clearly how we should consider what is right and wrong, and good and bad, and then work through these divisive problems toward decisions that make sense to us?

While challenging moral relativism, Doing Ethics in a Diverse World uses a pluralist approach that draws on religious as well as secular positions and on Eastern as well as Western traditions. The book's approach reasons by analogy from the rule of law, including international human rights law, as a means to constructing ethical presumptions about duty, character, relationships, and rights. These presumptions are weighed against the predicted consequences of acting on them, which either confirm the presumptions or support alternative actions.

chapter |2 pages

Learning from Experience

chapter |2 pages

Creating an Ethical Presumption

chapter 4|12 pages

Duty: Doing what is Right

chapter 5|17 pages

Character: Being a Good Person

chapter 6|17 pages

Relationships: Caring and Letting Go

chapter 7|22 pages

Human Rights: Autonomy and Human Dignity

chapter |2 pages

Overcoming an Ethical Presumption

chapter |2 pages

Applying the Approach

chapter 10|18 pages

Public Morality: Seeking the Common Good

chapter 11|19 pages

Health Care: Life and Death

chapter 12|17 pages

Sex: Consent Plus What?

chapter 13|22 pages

War Against Terrorism: Justice and Freedom

chapter 14|22 pages

Economic Justice: Fair and Caring?

chapter 15|22 pages

Our Natural World: Living Ecologically