The Moral Life, 2/e brings together an extensive collection of ninety-two classical and contemporary readings on ethical theory and practice. Editor Louis P. Pojman uses literary works to entiven and make concrete the ethical theory or applied issues addressed in each chapter. The second edition offers several new selections and also adds a new chapter on justice and the threat of terrorism featuring material from the Old Testament--in which the equivalent of a jihad occurs--followed by philosophical analyses by Martha Nussbaum and Louis P. Pojman.
Each chapter ends with Further Readings.
*=New to this edition
Preface
Introduction: On the Nature of Morality
PART I. THE NATURE OF MORALITY: Good and Evil
1. What Is the Purpose of Morality?
William Golding, Lord of the Flies: A Moral Allegory
Louis P. Pojman, On the Nature and Purpose of Morality: Reflections on William Golding's Lord of the Flies
Thomas Hobbes, On the State of Nature
2. Good and Evil
Herman Melville, Billy Budd
Fyodor Dostoevsky, Why Is There Evil?
William Styron, Sophie's Choice
* Kevin Bales, The New Slavery
Philip Hallie, From Cruelty to Goodness
Stanley Benn, Wickedness
Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil
Richard Taylor, On the Origin of Good and Evil
3. Is Everything Relative?
Herodotus, Custom Is King
Ruth Benedict, The Case for Moral Relativism
Louis P. Pojman, The Case Against Moral Relativism
Jean Bethke Elshtain, Judge Not?
Henrick Ibsen, The Enemy of the People
PART II. MORAL THEORIES AND MORAL CHARACTER
4. Utilitarianism
Seaman Holmes and the Longboat of William Brown, Reported by John William Wallace
Jeremy Bentham, Classical Utilitarianism
Kai Nielsen, A Defense of Utilitarianism
Bernard Williams, Against Utilitarianism
Ursula Le Guin, The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas
Aldous Huxley, The Utilitarian Social Engineer and the Savage
5. Deontological Ethics
Immanuel Kant, The Moral Law
W. D. Ross, Intuitionism
* R. M. MacIver, The Deep Beauty of the Golden Rule
Richard Whatley, A Critique of the Golden Rule
Ambrose Bierce, A Horseman in the Sky
Charles Fried, The Evil of Lying
* Susan Glaspell, A Jury of Her Peers
* Plato, Does Morality Depend on Religion?
Thomas Nagel, Moral Luck
6. Virtue Ethics
Victor Hugo, The Bishop and the Candlesticks
Aristotle, Virtue Ethics
Bernard Mayo, Virtue and the Moral Life
Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Great Stone Face
William Frankena, A Critique of Virtue-Based Ethical Systems
7. Virtues and Vices
Jesus of Nazareth, The Sermon on the Mount; The Good Samaritan
Leo Tolstoy, How Much Land Does a Man Need? Greed
Immanuel Kant, Jealousy, Malice, and Ingratitude
Martin Gansberg, Moral Cowardice
Helen Keller, Three Days to See: Gratitude
Epictetus and Others, The Stoic Catechism
* Plutarch, In Consolation to His Wife: Equanimity
Vice Admiral James Stockdale, The World of Epictetus: Courage and Endurance
The Story of David and Bathsheba: Lust
Leo Tolstoy, Where Love Is, There Is God: Love
Bertrand Russell, Reflections on Suffering
Charles Colson, The Volunteer at Auschwitz: Altruism
PART III. MORAL ISSUES
8. Ethics and Egoism: Why Should We Be Moral?
Plato, The Ring of Gyges
* Ayn Rand, In Defense of Ethical Egoism
Louis P. Pojman, Egoism and Altruism: A Critique of Ayn Rand
* James Rachels, A Critique of Ethical Egoism
9. Does Life Have Meaning?
* Voltaire, The Good Brahmin
Epicurus, Hedonism
Albert Camus, Life Is Absurd
Lois Hope Walker, Religion Gives Meaning to Life
Viktor Frankl, The Human Search for Meaning: Reflections on Auschwitz
Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, The Four Noble Truths
Robert Nozick, The Experience Machine
10. Freedom, Autonomy, and Self-Respect
Martin Luther King, Jr., I Have a Dream
* Maya Angelou, Graduation
Stanley Milgram, An Experiment in Autonomy
Jean-Paul Sartre, Existentialism Is a Humanism
Thomas E. Hill, Jr., Servility and Self-Respect
* John Benson, Who Is the Autonomous Man?
* Kurt Vonnegut, Harrison Bergeron
PART IV. APPLIED ETHICS: Moral Problems
11. Sex, Love, and Marriage
John Barth, Pansexuality
Immanuel Kant, On the Place of Sex in Human Existence
John McMurtry, Monogamy: A Critique
Michael D. Bayles, Marriage, Love, and Procreation: A Critique of McMurtry
Bonnie Steinbock, What's Wrong with Adultery?
* C. S. Lewis, We Have No "Right to Happiness"
Hugh LaFollette, Licensing Parents
12. Is Abortion Morally Permissible?
John T. Noonan, Jr., Abortion Is Not Morally Permissible
Mary Anne Warren, Abortion Is Morally Permissible
Jane English, The Moderate Position: Beyond the Personhood Argument
13. Substance Abuse: Drugs and Alcohol
John Stuart Mill, On Liberty
Gore Vidal, Drugs Should Be Legalized
William Bennett, Drugs Should Not Be Legalized
Yoshida Kenko, On Drinking
Bonnie Steinbock, Drunk Driving
14. Our Duties to Animals
George Orwell, Shooting an Elephant
Immanuel Kant, We Have Only Indirect Duties to Animals
Peter Singer, Animal Liberation: All Animals Are Equal
Carl Cohen, The Case Against Animal Rights
15. Our Duties to the Environment
Sophocles, On Mankind's Power over Nature
Robert Heilbroner, What Has Posterity Ever Done for Me?
Garrett Hardin, The Tragedy of the Commons
William F. Baxter, People or Penguins: The Case for Optimal Pollution
16. International Justice and the Threat of Terrorism
* God's Command to Destroy Jericho and Ai
* Martha C. Nussbaum, Compassion and Terror
* Louis P. Pojman, The Cosmopolitan Response to Terrorism