Moral Literacy

Moral Literacy
Title Moral Literacy PDF eBook
Author Colin McGinn
Publisher Hackett Publishing
Pages 112
Release 1993-06-01
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 1624667813

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"A great resource for beginning ethics courses. The book is short and yet it richly embodies the methods of ethical thinking about practical moral problems that are hard for students to learn unless they see them in action. McGinn perspicuously sets out a small set of basic principles and then attacks the problems of our treatment of animals, abortion, sex, censorship, and so on, with a masterful blend of attention to real-life cases and imaginary thought experiments. McGinn hardly claims to have the last word on the complex issues he discusses, and students will find many exciting problems and points to take up." —Owen Flanagan, Duke University

Moral Literacy, Or, How to Do the Right Thing

Moral Literacy, Or, How to Do the Right Thing
Title Moral Literacy, Or, How to Do the Right Thing PDF eBook
Author Colin McGinn
Publisher Duckworth Publishing
Pages 120
Release 1992
Genre Philosophy
ISBN

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Educational Leadership and Moral Literacy

Educational Leadership and Moral Literacy
Title Educational Leadership and Moral Literacy PDF eBook
Author Patrick M. Jenlink
Publisher R&L Education
Pages 250
Release 2014-03-18
Genre Education
ISBN 1610487281

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What makes a moral person moral? Who decides what morality means? What makes leadership practice moral? In today’s schools, what stands as moral leadership? These are questions that reflect the complexity integral to the calculus of human morality, especially in a world that is defined daily by its variant meanings of morality, its acts of immorality. The school as an educational setting is or should be a decidedly moral center of the society; it is the natural intersect between the family and the multi-dimensional nature of public life. Educational Leadership and Moral Literacy addresses these questions, situating the reader in a conversation that examines the meaning and nature of moral leadership through the lens of moral literacy and the dispositional aims of moral leadership in educational settings. The contributing authors extend an argument that the work of leader educators and practitioners alike must continuously be re-articulated around the dispositional aims aligned with a moral, democratic education. Educators must be concerned with developing the moral, intellectual, and aesthetic dimensions of the educational leader as a “moral person.”

Moral Reasons

Moral Reasons
Title Moral Reasons PDF eBook
Author Charles K. Fink
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Pages 193
Release 2016-11-17
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 0761868437

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Distinguished by its readability and scope, Moral Reasons explains how to think critically about issues in ethics and political philosophy. After a detailed overview of moral reasoning―including dozens of exercises―the text guides readers through the theories and arguments of philosophers from Plato to Peter Singer. Among the topics explored are moral skepticism, abortion, euthanasia, vegetarianism, political authority, punishment, and war. Ideal as a main text for courses in introductory or applied ethics or as a supplemental text for courses in political philosophy, this book offers one of the most diverse investigations of moral philosophy there is to date.

Moral Literacy

Moral Literacy
Title Moral Literacy PDF eBook
Author Barbara Herman
Publisher Harvard University Press
Pages 353
Release 2008-09-15
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 0674030524

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A distinguished moral philosopher and a leading interpreter of Kant's ethics, Barbara Herman draws on Kant to address timeless issues in ethical theory as well as ones arising from current moral problems, such as obligations to distant need, the history of slavery as it bears on affirmative action, and the moral costs of reparative justice. Challenging various Kantian orthodoxies, Herman offers a view of moral competency as a complex achievement, governed by rational norms and dependent on supportive social conditions. She argues that the objectivity of duties and obligations does not rule out the possibility of or need for moral invention. Her goal is not to revise Kant but to explore the issues and ask the questions that he did not consider. Some of the essays involve explicit interpretation of Kant, and others are prompted by ground-level questions. For example, how should we think about moral character given what we know about the fault lines in normal development? If ordinary moral life is saturated by the content of local institutions, how should our accounts of moral obligation and judgment accommodate this?

The Human Rights Reader

The Human Rights Reader
Title The Human Rights Reader PDF eBook
Author Micheline Ishay
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Pages 590
Release 2007
Genre Law
ISBN 0415951607

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This book presents the most comprehensive collection of essays, speeches, and documents, from historical and contemporary sources, available on the subject of human rights.

Do the Right Thing

Do the Right Thing
Title Do the Right Thing PDF eBook
Author Francis J. Beckwith
Publisher Jones & Bartlett Publishers
Pages 646
Release 1996
Genre Philosophy
ISBN

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