1. Introduction
2. Aggregation and Problems about Trade-offs: Many-Person
Spectrum
3. A "New" Principle of Aggregation
4. On the Separateness of Individuals, Compensation, and
Aggregation
5. Aggregation and Problems about Trade-offs Within Lives: Single-
Person Spectrum Arguments
6. Another Spectrum Argument: From Infant to Fertilized Ovum
7. Exploring Transitivity: Part I
8. Exploring Transitivity: Part II
9. Expected Utility Theory/Expected Value Theory
10. Spectrum Arguments: Objections and Replies
11. On the Value of Utility and Two Models for Combining Ideals
12. On the Nature of Moral Ideals, Part I
13. On the Nature of Moral Ideals, Part II
14. Juggling to Preserve Transitivity
15. Conclusion
Appendices
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Larry S. Temkin is Distinguished Professor and Chair of Philosophy at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey.
"... [A] great work of philosophy... both groundshaking and crafted
with near-perfect precision... one of the most important works in
ethics to appear in recent decades, sure to be studied closely by
philosophers and non-philosophers alike for decades to come... [a]
brilliant and exciting book." --Melinda Roberts, Analysis
"Larry Temkin's monumental book Rethinking the Good is by far the
most resourceful and penetrating investigation into the various
aspects of the value of outcomes to date."
-- Ingmar Persson, Law, Ethics, and Philosophy
"A real tour de force..." --Véronique Munoz-Dardé, The Journal of
Moral Philosophy
"...a rich and challenging work, and a profound contribution."
--Richard Kraut, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
"Rethinking the Good is the most powerful challenge to our
understanding of axiology and normative theory in contemporary
philosophy to date. Calling it a classic or a masterpiece is an
understatement: it is a true milestone with which we enter a new
stage in the study of value theory."
--Oscar Horta, Law, Ethics, and Philosophy
"The most important work in choice theory and social choice in some
time." --Tyler Cowen, MARGINALREVOLUTION
"Larry Temkin's magnum opus, Rethinking the Good... is
unquestionably one of the grandest, most significant, and most
profound works on value and practical reasoning ever written."
--Jake Ross, The Journal of Moral Philosophy
"This book is about some of the most profound issues in human
life... its challenging and sophisticated arguments will be sources
of insight and inspiration for anyone who reflects on them."
--Roger Crisp, Oxford University
"Rethinking the Good is a genuinely awe-inspiring achievement.
...Its discussions of a broad range of the deepest and most
perplexing issues in normative ethics are unsurpassed in
imaginativeness, subtlety, and rigor... Temkin's rich and brilliant
book will transform our understanding of many of the most important
problems in ethical theory."
-- Jeff McMahan, Oxford University
"Rethinking the Good threatens to overturn some of our most deeply
entrenched beliefs about our various values and practical
reasoning.... [It is] an utterly original work of philosophy,
almost breath-takingly so."
--Shelly Kagan, Yale University
"It is a rich and challenging work, and a profound contribution to
that part of moral philosophy that seeks a ground for
decision-making in the evaluation of states of affairs."
--Richard Kraut, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
"Larry Temkin's Rethinking the Good threatens to overturn some of
our most deeply entrenched beliefs about our various values and
practical reasoning. The issues that Temkin discusses are
completely central to moral philosophy and beyond, and Temkin's
conclusions are deeply unsettling. Indeed, I think it fair to say
that they are so surprising that most people will simply assume
that they must be wrong. But as Temkin painstakingly demonstrates,
there
are no easy solutions to the problems that he discusses--there is
no way to avoid giving up something to which we are pretty deeply
committed. Rethinking the Good is, in its way, an utterly original
work of
philosophy, almost breathtakingly so."
--Shelly Kagan, Yale University
"This book is about some of the most profound issues in human life,
including our own good, and how to weigh the good of one person
against that of others. Its conclusions have significant
implications for the very possibility of practical rationality, and
its challenging and sophisticated arguments will be sources of
insight and inspiration for anyone who reflects on them."
--Roger Crisp, St. Anne's College, Oxford
"Rethinking the Good is a genuinely awe-inspiring achievement. Its
discussions of a broad range of the deepest and most perplexing
issues in normative ethics are unsurpassed in imaginativeness,
subtlety, and rigor. On the foundational but extraordinarily
difficult issue of whether our moral reasons are 'person-affecting'
or impersonal in character, or whether there are reasons of both
sorts that may conflict, it contains the best discussion I know
of
since the appearance of Parfit's seminal arguments in Reasons and
Persons. Temkin's rich and brilliant book will transform our
understanding of many of the most important problems in ethical
theory."
--Jeff McMahan, author of The Ethics of Killing and Killing in War
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