ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1985 and now re-issued with a new preface, this study assesses the two major moral theories of ethical consequentialism and common-sense morality by means of mutual comparison and an attempt to elicit the implications and tendencies of each theory individually. The author shows that criticisms and defences of common-sense morality and of consequentialism give inadequate characterizations of the dispute between them and thus at best provide incomplete rationales for either of these influential moral views. Both theories face inherent difficulties, some familiar but others mentioned for the first time in this work. The argument proceeds by reference to historical figures like Bentham, Ross and Sidgwick and to contemporary thinkers such as Williams, Nagel, Hare and Sen.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter I|14 pages

Common-Sense Morality and Consequentialism

chapter II|12 pages

Moral Autonomy

chapter III|25 pages

Satisficing Consequentialism

chapter IV|16 pages

Morality and the Practical

chapter V|16 pages

Scalar Morality

chapter VI|15 pages

Consequentialism and Beyond

chapter VII|22 pages

Common-Sense Morality and the Future

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion