Goodness and Justice: A Consequentialist Moral Theory

Joseph Mendola (University of Nebraska, Lincoln)

Goodness and Justice: A Consequentialist Moral Theory
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
10 April 2006
Pages
338
ISBN
9780521859530

Goodness and Justice: A Consequentialist Moral Theory

Joseph Mendola (University of Nebraska, Lincoln)

In Goodness and Justice, Joseph Mendola develops a unified moral theory that defends the hedonism of classical utilitarianism, while evading utilitarianism’s familiar difficulties by adopting two modifications. His theory incorporates a developed form of consequentialism. When, as is common, someone is engaged in conflicting group acts, it requires that one perform one’s role in that group act that is most beneficent. The theory also holds that overall value is distribution-sensitive, ceding maximum weight to the well-being of the worst-off sections of sentient lives. It is properly congruent with commonsense intuition and required by the true metaphysics of value, by the unconstituted natural good found in our world.

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