The Rational and the Moral Order: The Social Roots of Reason and Morality

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Open Court Publishing, 1995 - 447 pages
'The Rational and the Moral Order' is a significant book providing a comprehensive theory of morality. The opening chapter is simply marvellous. Baier provides a cogent response to Hume's conundrums on practical reasoning: logical entailment, he argues, is not the correct model of the relation between reasons and that for which they are reasons. Indeed, the giving of reasons is, in part, a social enterprise, and there is no necessary connection between rationality and self-interest.

Just as the giving of reasons is a social enterprise taught to succeeding generations, so too is the moral enterprise, for a moral order is a social order of some sort. It is a social order that encourages a critical stance toward, and permits the correction of, its mores. Moral precepts can be sound or unsound, and yet can be relative to a moral order.

In the concluding chapter Baier shows how his theoretical framework can be used to confront some of the moral problems people face, problems which have also exercised contemporary philosophers. Though there are many philosophers who believe that killing is worse than letting anyone die, there are few that defend the view other than by raw intuition. Baier deploys the resources of his theory of morality in support of this widely shared but poorly defended viewpoints.

"Along the way, Baier deals with virtually all the problems that have taxed moral philosophers for a very long time -- rationality, responsibility, morality's relation to law, the good life, prisoner's dilemma, moral motivation, and others. The Rational and the Moral Order is careful, insightful, and convincing." --Theodore M. Benditt, University of Alabama
 

Contents

Three Problems for Ethical Theory
1
1
20
The Form of Directive Reasons
57
1 2 The Context of Justification
65
3 3 Requiring and Permissive Reasons
76
Abstract and Concrete ReasonStatements
84
1 The Haunted Organic Machine
92
SocietyAnchored Reasons
155
The Moral Enterprise
225
THE MORAL ORDER
289
Institutional Artificial Morality
310
Applications
343
3 Another Kind of Moral Comparison
372
NOTES
391
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PUBLICATIONS CITED
427
INDEX
435

Conditional Good Will
186
THE MORAL ORDER
195

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