This non-technical introduction to ethics explores how we find true or reasonable moral principles, applicable to current concerns and issues. The reader is presented with seven radically different basic moral theories. Each theory attempts to provide an ultimate answer to the question of what ought to be done and why. Each theory is carefully described, put into historical perspective and critically assessed. The theories covered utilitarianism, egoism, deontological ethics, the ethics of rights, virtue ethics, feminist ethics, environmental or ecological ethics.
Came to this book to get a better sense of the intellectual landscape of ethical philosophy but gave up after 2 chapters. The methodology given in the intro (come up with a theory, apply it to various cases until we find a conflict with our intuitions, revise, rinse, repeat) was worrying enough, but the first two chapters at least didn't even follow that. Instead, Tännsjö just haphazardly throws a small handful of positions and arguments together with unsupported assertions about their reasonableness, leaving me feeling like I knew just as much about utilitarianism and egoism (the two chapters I read) afterward as I had at first, despite completely lacking any formal philosophical education.
Good, simple, and highly readable intro to ethical philosophy My only complaint is that feminist ethics is tacked on the end and dispensed with slightly summarily, but that appears to be standard practice - and Tannsjo is a self-declared utilitarian, so at least he comes clean about his motives!
Stopped after several chapters. I need a more careful methodology, an attempt to be precise and systematic. Too many assertions, almost no primary source excerpts. Moving on to a new text for my ethics reading with Shea.