ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1987, this book discusses how matters of fact influence moral judgments and also how the judgments themselves influence facts. It demonstrates that ethics is a practical subject affecting our moral assessment of inter-personal behaviour and the conduct of public affairs. It is designed as in introduction to moral philosophy for first-year undergraduates and provides an excellent basis for further study as well as serving as a valuable background text for those whose primary interests are in law, politics, sociology, social history and education.

chapter

Introduction

chapter I|6 pages

Morality Does Matter

chapter II|10 pages

Judgments

chapter III|9 pages

Fact and Value

chapter IV|9 pages

Emotivism and Prescriptivism

chapter V|20 pages

Consequentialism: Happiness and Justice

chapter VI|26 pages

Intuitionism

chapter VII|9 pages

Conventions of Trust and Institutional Facts

chapter VIII|14 pages

Benevolence: Man and Beast

chapter IX|10 pages

Moral Conflict and Rational Choice

chapter X|12 pages

Secondary Principles and Social Values

chapter XI|15 pages

Morality And The Law

chapter XII|17 pages

Morality and Rights

chapter XIII|8 pages

The Morality of Politics and Politicians

chapter XIV|4 pages

Practical Reason: Sense and Sensibility