Moral failure : on the impossible demands of morality
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Moral failure : on the impossible demands of morality
Oxford University Press, 2016, c2015
- : pbk
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Note
Originally published: 2015. "First issued as an Oxford University Press paperback, 2016"--T.p. verso
Bibliography: p. [257]-272
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Moral Failure: On the Impossible Demands of Morality asks what happens when the sense that "I must" collides with the realization that "I can't." Bringing together philosophical and empirical work in moral psychology, Lisa Tessman here examines moral requirements that are non-negotiable and that contravene the principle that "ought implies can." In some cases, it is because two non-negotiable requirements conflict that one of them becomes impossible to
satisfy, and yet remains binding. In other cases, performing a particular action may be non-negotiably required - even if it is impossible - because not performing the action is unthinkable.
After offering both conceptual and empirical explanations of the experience of impossible moral requirements and the ensuing failures to fulfill them, Tessman considers what to make of such experience, and in particular, what role such experience has in the construction of value and of moral authority.
According to the constructivist account that the book proposes, some moral requirements can be authoritative even when they are impossible to fulfill. Tessman points out a tendency to not acknowledge the difficulties that impossible moral requirements and unavoidable moral failures create in moral life, and traces this tendency through several different literatures, from scholarship on Holocaust testimony to discussions of ideal and nonideal theory, from theories of supererogation to debates
about moral demandingness and to feminist care ethics.
Table of Contents
Contents
Introduction
Part I: Are There Impossible Moral Requirements?
1. Moral Dilemmas and Impossible Moral Requirements
2. Moral Intuition and Moral Reasoning
3. Risking Confidence
Part II: Evasions
4. Witnessing Moral Failure
5. Idealizing Morality
Part III: Endless Demands
6. Minimizing the Demands of Morality
7. On Having an Inexhaustible Source of Moral Requirements
Conclusion
References
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"