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portada Virtue, Rules, and Justice: Kantian Aspirations (in English)
Type
Physical Book
Year
2012
Language
English
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
0199692017
ISBN13
9780199692019
Edition No.
1

Virtue, Rules, and Justice: Kantian Aspirations (in English)

Thomas E. Jr. Hill (Author) · Oxford University Press · Paperback

Virtue, Rules, and Justice: Kantian Aspirations (in English) - Thomas E. Jr. Hill

Physical Book

$ 68.00

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Synopsis "Virtue, Rules, and Justice: Kantian Aspirations (in English)"

Thomas E. Hill, Jr., interprets, explains, and extends Kant's moral theory in a series of essays that highlight its relevance to contemporary ethics. The book is divided into four sections. The first three essays cover basic themes: they introduce the major aspects of Kant's ethics; explain different interpretations of the Categorical Imperative; and sketch a 'constructivist' reading of Kantian normative ethics distinct from the Kantian constructivisms of Onora O'Neill and John Rawls. The next section is on virtue, and the essays collected here discuss whether it is a virtue to regard the natural environment as intrinsically valuable, address puzzles about moral weakness, contrast ideas of virtue in Kant's ethics and in 'virtue ethics,' and comment on duties to oneself, second-order duties, and moral motivation in Kant's Doctrine of Virtue. Four essays on moral rules propose human dignity as a guiding value for a system of norms rather than a self-standing test for isolated cases, contrast the Kantian perspectives on moral rules with rule-utilitarianism and then with Jonathan Dancy's moral particularism, and distinguish often-conflated questions about moral relativism. Hill goes on to outline a Kantian position on two central issues. In the last section of the book, three essays on practical questions show how a broadly Kantian theory, if critical of Kant's official theory of law, might re-visit questions about revolution, prison reform, and forcible interventions in other countries for humanitarian purposes. In the final essay, Hill develops the implications of Kant's Doctrine of Virtue for the responsibility of by-standers to oppression.

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All books in our catalog are Original.
The book is written in English.
The binding of this edition is Paperback.

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