"Although the level of Almond's language is too high for many A-level students, her book makes a good revision text for more advanced candidates." <i>Jonathan Webber, Dialogue, 1996</i> <p>"This excellent, handy collection will be found useful by anyone who wants to show how philosophy is 'relevant'." <i>Richard Ashcroft, University of Liverpool, Society for Applied Philosophy, 1996</i></p> <p> "This volume provides a most valuable collection of articles arranged in five sections dealing with family relationships, the professions, crime and punishment, economics and politics, and international and global dimensions. The contributors are leading philosophers and ethicists. There can be few better ways of approaching such a wide range of issues." <i>The Expository Times</i></p>
- Wide coverage and introduction to the main issues and arguments of applied ethics
- Each chapter specially commissioned to introduce newcomers
- Comprehensive notes and reading guides
Introduction. Ethical Theory and Ethical Practice: Brenda Almond (University of Hull).
Part I: The Personal Dimension: Family and Relationships:.
1. Trouble with Familes?: Mary Midgley and Judith Hughes (Both at Newcastle).
2. Love and Personal Relationships: Paul Gregory (Germany).
3. Between the Sexes: Care or Justice?: Moira Gatens (Sydney).
4. Children Who Run: Ethics and Homelesness: Michael Parker (Middlesex).
Part II: Public and Professional Dimensions: Ethics and the Professions:.
5. Education: Conserving Tradition: John Haldane (St. Andrews).
6. Ethics, Law and the Quality of the Media: Andrew Belsey (University of Wales College of Cardiff).
7. Reconciling Business Imperatives and Moral Virtues: Jennifer Jackson (Leeds).
8. The Gene Revolution: Ruth Chadwick (Cardiff).
9. Information and Accountability in Science: Dick Holdsworth (Luxembourg).
10. Psychiatry, Compulsory Treatment and the Value-Based Model of Mental Illness: W. Fulford (Warneford Hospital).
Part III: The Legal Dimensions: Crime and Punishment:.
11. Crime and Responsibility: H. Tam (Cambridge).
12. Is Psychopathy a Moral Concept?: M. Bavidge and A. Cole (Both at Newcastle).
13. Life, Death and the Law: Robert Campbell (Bolton Institute).
14. Ethical Questions Facing Law Enforcement Agents: John Kleinig (CUNY).
Part IV: Economic and Political Dimensions: Politics and Society:.
15. Is Efficiency Ethical? Resource Issues in Health Care: Donna Dickenson (Open University, Milton Keyne).
16. Liberty or Community? Defining the Postmarxist Agenda: Brenda Almond (Hull).
17. A Defence of Property Rights and Capitalism: Tibor Machan (Auburn).
18. Nationalism and Intervention: A. J. Coady (University of Melbourne).
Part V: International and Global Dimensions: Extending the Moral Community:.
19. Rich and Poor: Jennifer Trusted (Exeter).
20. War, Terrorism and Ethical Consistency: Gerry Wallace (Hull).
21. Enlarging the Community: Companion Animals: Stephen Clark (Liverpool).
22. Ethics and the Environment: the Global Perspective: Robin Attfield (Cardiff).
Bibliographies.
Index.
The text follows a logical development from the more personal and immediate concerns of the individual to the broadest and most extensive practical applications of contemporary ethical theory - including the public, medical, professional, legal, social, political, and global dimensions.
Topics covered include families, love, gender, children, education, the media, business, genetics, science, psychiatry, crime, death, police, healthcare, liberty, property, capitalism, nationalism, wealth, war, terrorism, animal rights, and the environment.
This lively and important volume gives readers exactly what they need to understand and evaluate the diversity of ethical arguments and debates. Each chapter is supplemented by comprehensive notes, reading guides, and a bibliography.
Written by leading ethicists and moral philosophers, it provides the ideal basis for an introductory course in applied ethics.