Moral Theory and AnomalyISBN: 978-0-631-21834-0
Paperback
232 pages
December 1999, Wiley-Blackwell
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Part I: Doubts About Moral Theories.
1. Moral Theory and Anti-Theory: Uses for Moral Theory.
Scepticism about Moral Theory.
Countering Anti-Theory.
Summary.
2. Theory versus Theories: Williams on Moral Theory.
A Rough Parallel: Normal Science and Standard Normative Ethical Theory.
Puzzles in Moral Theory.
Puzzles versus Anomalies.
The Argument of the Rest of the Book.
Part II: Some Sources of Anomaly?.
3. Business, the Ethical and Self-interest: Two Sources of Prima Facie Anomaly.
The Utopianism of Business Ethics.
Moral Sensibility and Insensibility in Business.
Moral Reasons Again.
The Deep Problem in Business Ethics.
4. Politics, Power and Partisanship: Political Morality: The Moral Risks of Power for the Public Good.
Dirty Hands.
Public Morality, Private Morality and Moral Schizophrenia.
Hampshire's Anti-Theory of Political Morality.
The Difference Democracy Makes.
Democracy and Partisanship.
5. Feminism and Moral Theory: How Conventional Theories Let Women Down.
Moral Theory After Gilligan.
Beyond Care? Sarah Hoagland's Lesbian Ethics.
Theory Without Patriarchy?.
The Challenge of Practice: Two True Stories.
Conclusion.
6. Environmentalism and Moral Theory: The Land Ethic and its Competitors.
Is the Land Ethic a Moral Theory?.
How Thoroughgoing is the Land Ethic?.
The Problem of Grounding Reconsidered.
From Deep Environmentalist Theory to Practice.
A Residual Anomaly.
Part III: Conclusion.
7. The Significance of Anomaly: Anomalies Reviewed.
Do Anomalies Have Anything in Common?.
The Significance of Anomaly.
Notes.
Index.