Public and Private Morality

Type
Book
Authors
HAMPSHIRE ( Stuart )
 
ISBN 10
0521293529 
Category
177.62 ETHICS(MORAL PHILOSOPHY)-e thics of Social Relation  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
1978 
Pages
143 
Subject
Political ethics -- Addresses, essays, lectures; Politics Ethical aspects; 
Abstract
How far can we apply the same moral principles to both public and private behavior? In the interests of effective political action, are we right to accept acts of deceit, exploitation or force which we would regard as unacceptable in private relations with individuals? What means can be properly adopted in the promotion of great public causes?
The problem of 'dirty hands' in politics was posed most strikingly by Machiavelli. It has re-emerged this century in a pressing and, to some extent, a new form, in connection with the two World Wars and more recently the Vietnam War, where the political decisions and the destruction, and risks of destruction, have been of a scale and character not previously experienced.
The contributors to this volume examine the background to this problem in moral and political theory. Stuart Hampshire, Bernard Williams, and considered the continuity and the discontinuities between public and private morality and the models of rationality that might be appropriate to each. T. M. Scanlon and Ronald Dworkin, consider more generally the type of moral claim on which political arguments turn; they look for a rational foundation for contemporary library attitudes.
The volume will be of interest to the students of political theory and ethics, and to anyone concerned with or about political issues and political life.
 
Description
How far can we apply the same moral principles to both public and private behaviour. In the interests of effective political action, are we right to accept acts of deceit, exploitation or force which we would regard as unacceptable in private relations with individuals? What means can be properly adopted in the promotion of great public causes? The problem of 'dirty hands' in politics was posed most strikingly by Machiavelli. It has re-emerged this century in a pressing and, to some extent, a new form, in connection with the two World Wars and more recently the Vietnam War, where the political decisions and the destruction, and risks of destruction, have been of a scale and character not previously experienced. The contributors, including Bernard Williams, Thomas Nagel, T. M. Scanlon, and Ronald Dworkin, examine the background to this problem in moral and political theory. - from Amzon 
Biblio Notes
Table of Contents

1 Morality and pessimism Stuart Hampshire ……………...P. 1

2 Public and private morality Stuart Hampshire ……………P. 23

3 Politics and moral character Bernard Williams ……………P. 55

4 Ruthlessness in public life Thomas Nagel ………………..…P. 75

5 Rights, goals and fairness T. M. Scanlon …………………...P. 93

6 Liberalism Ronald Dworkin ………………………………..........P. 113
 
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