Responsibility Matters
Peter A. French
248 pages, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0626-9, $14.95
Most of us spend a fair amount
of time trying to avoid responsibility. That's not too astounding.
What is surprising, says Peter French, is that we tend
to dodge the good variety as well as the bad.
"The problem for most of us, excepting moral masochists,
is that responsibility does get doled," he writes. "The
strategy is either not to be in the receiving line or to find
a way to get as little dumped on one's plate as possible, to
trade off to others as much as one can. Consequently, the responsibility
barter game is probably the most common experience ordinary people
have with morality."
In Responsibility Matters, French investigates a variety
of matters relating to responsibility--from theoretical aspects
and elements of the concept of responsibility to specific areas
of application and general issues in moral theory. Unlike Kant
and others who see responsibility as a necessary presupposition
of practical life, he believes it is a set of practices that
we use to describe and understand individual and social behavior.
Using examples from literature, film, and current events as
well as traditional philosophical literature, he raises questions
about responsibility in political, environmental, legal, medical,
corporate, and military justice matters. He also covers other
issues, including fate, innocence, power, control, and individual
and group responsibility.
"This is a well-written, inventive and often delightful
book that breaks new ground in some awfully well-trodden and
often tedious territory. I love how French draws on movies, literature,
and ordinary conversation to set up and sometimes help resolve
philosophical discussions. His use of literature is excellent--Dickens
on space and time, for example--and his philosophical follow-ups
are challenging. This book will cause a stir and excite some
real discussion."--Robert C. Solomon, author of Passion
for Justice: Emotion and the Origins of the Social Contract
"French is clearly the most important American moral
philosopher writing on the concept of responsibility. His essays
are witty, sophisticated, and curmudgeonly. He sets the terms
of the debate for the rest of us."--Larry May, author
of Sharing Responsibility
"Intriguing and stimulating throughout. French's scope
is remarkably broad; he ties together issues and work in metaphysics,
ethics, political and legal theory, and literature. By broadening
the domain of analysis, he has made a useful contribution to
the ongoing debates about the nature of moral responsibility."--John
Martin Fischer, editor of Moral Responsibility
PETER A. FRENCH holds the Lincoln Chair in Ethics and
is Director of the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics at Arizona
State University. Among his other books are The
Virtues of Vengeance, also from Kansas; Corporate
Ethics; andCowboy Metaphysics: Ethics and Death in Westerns.
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