On What We Owe to Each Other

by
Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2004-06-18
Publisher(s): Wiley-Blackwell
List Price: $49.93

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Summary

T.M. Scanlon's What We Owe to Each Other is one of the most significant works in moral philosophy of recent years. It presents distinctive views on reasons, value, and well-being, and offers a contractualist account of moral wrongness and significance. It has initiated debates on the nature of value, the role of well-being, how numbers matter in deciding what we should do, and the role justifiability plays in our moral thinking. In On What We Owe to Each Other, five leading moral philosophers assess various aspects of Scanlon's moral theory as laid out in this seminal work. Topics discussed include Scanlon's contractualism, his view on well-being, aggregation, the nature of moral properties, moral reasoning, and relativism. The book also includes a response by T.M. Scanlon in which he clarifies and develops his views.

Author Biography

Philip Stratton-Lake is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Reading. He has published widely on Kant, intuitionism and metaethics. He is the author of Kant, Duty and Moral Worth (2000) and editor of Ethical Intuitionism: Re-evaluations (2002).

Table of Contents

Introduction
1(18)
Philip Stratton-Lake
Constructivism vs. Contractualism
19(13)
Onora O'Neill
Scanlon on Well-Being
32(14)
Jonathan Wolff
Numbers, With and Without Contracualism
46(21)
Joseph Raz
Justifiability to Each Person
67(23)
Derek Parfit
The Limits of Moral Constructivism
90(33)
Mark Timmons
Replies
123(16)
T. M. Scanlon
Index 139

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