
In Morality, Mortality, Volume II, Kamm continues to explore questions of life and death as illustrations of general issues in moral theory. Resuming her development of non- consequentialist ethical theory and its application to practical ethical problems, she explores the distinction between killing and letting die, between harming and not aiding, and between intending and foreseeing harm. Throughout this examination, she focuses on the methodology used in analyzing these questions. Kamm develops a principled account of when harming some to save others is permissable and impermissable. In the process, she discusses the "Survival Lottery and Trolley Problem," and other related dilemmatic situations. Kamm then covers the concepts of rights and prerogatives, contrasting a victim-focused account of rights with that of an agent-relative account. Here, she considers the problem of minimizing rights violations, and the significance of the status of inviolability. She concludes Volume II by assessing whether agreements or superogatory conduct may permissably override restrictions, and what their doing or not doing indicates about morality, duties, and prerogatives.
This volume investigates the foundational principles of non-consequentialist moral theory by examining the ethical complexities surrounding life, death, and individual rights. F. M. Kamm, a prominent philosopher, utilizes rigorous analytical methodology to address practical dilemmas, including the distinction between killing and letting die. She constructs a principled framework to evaluate when harming individuals to save others is permissible, while simultaneously critiquing agent-relative versus victim-focused accounts of rights.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to contemporary non-consequentialist ethics, often noting the high level of analytical precision required to follow Kamm's arguments. Scholars frequently cite this text as a foundational resource for those studying the intersection of moral theory and practical decision-making.
Page Count:
400
Publication Date:
2001-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press USA
ISBN-10:
0198024592
ISBN-13:
9780198024590
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