Who should die? : the ethics of killing in war
著者
書誌事項
Who should die? : the ethics of killing in war
Oxford University Press, c2018
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
War remains a grim fixture of the human landscape, and because of its tremendous and ongoing impact on the lives of millions of people, has always attracted the attention of careful, rigorous, and empathetic moral philosophers. And while war is synonymous with death and ruin, very few people are willing to surrender to moral nihilism about war--the view that all really is fair. At the center of debates about war remains the most important question that faces us during battle: whom are we allowed to kill?
This volume collects in one place the most influential and groundbreaking philosophical work being done on the question of killing in war, offering a "who's who" of contemporary scholars debating the foundational ethical questions surrounding liability to harm. In ten essays, it expands upon and provides new and updated analyses that have yet to be captured in a single work. Essays explore questions such as: Are some soldiers more deserving of death than others? Should states allow soldiers to conscientiously object (to opt out of war) on a case-by-case basis? Can a theory of rights best explain when it is permissible to kill in war? When are we allowed to violently resist oppression that is itself nonviolent? Is there anything wrong with targeting people with autonomous weapons?
As a convenient and authoritative collection of such discussions, this volume is uniquely suited for university-level teaching and as a reference for ethicists, policymakers, stakeholders, and any student of the morality of killing in war.
目次
Notes on Contributors
Chapter Abstracts
Foreword
Who Should Die? Editors' Introduction
Chapter 1. Liability to Deadly Force in War Leonard Kahn
Chapter 2. Jus in Bello: Actual vs. Hypothetical Contract Yitzhak Benbaji
Chapter 3. Do Some Soldiers Deserve to Die More Than Others? David Whetham
Chapter 4. Defensive Liability: Four Common Mistakes Kai Draper
Chapter 5. Fighting for One's Self Michael Robillard
Chapter 6. An Axiomatic Theory of Just War: Forfeiture Theory Stephen Kershnar
Chapter 7. Dignity, Self-Respect, and Bloodless Invasions Saba Bazargan
Chapter 8. What is the Moral Problem with Killer Robots? Susanne Burri
Chapter 9. Distributing the Cost of Rescue Lars Christie
Chapter 10. Legality, Justice, and the War on Terrorism Lionel K. McPherson
Post-script
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