Varieties of Ethical Reflection: New Directions for Ethics in a Global ContextMichael Barnhart Lexington Books, 2002 - 347 pagini Varieties of Ethical Reflection brings together new cultural and religious perspectives--drawn from non-Western, primarily Asian, philosophical sources--to globalize the contemporary discussion of theoretical and applied ethics. The work pushes ethics beyond a Western philosophical tradition tending toward universalism to infuse and broaden modern ethical theory with relativistic Asian ethical principles. The contributors introduce multicultural concepts and ideas from the Chinese Taoist, Confucian and Neo-Confucian, Indian and East Asian Buddhist, and Hindu traditions, focusing on such areas of moral controversy as the clash between women's rights and culture; universal human rights; abortion and euthanasia in a non-Western setting; and the standardization of medical practice across cultures. |
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Pagina 2
... argue for this schematiza- tion , although I believe a careful reading of those chapters in the first or " theory " section of the book will bear this rough generalization out . Let me begin though , by touching on a basic background ...
... argue for this schematiza- tion , although I believe a careful reading of those chapters in the first or " theory " section of the book will bear this rough generalization out . Let me begin though , by touching on a basic background ...
Pagina 4
... argue why nature must have de- signed reason to give us the capacity to control our will , not that a good will is in- contestably good in itself . But in fact , he offers no argument to back up the abso- lute goodness of a purely good ...
... argue why nature must have de- signed reason to give us the capacity to control our will , not that a good will is in- contestably good in itself . But in fact , he offers no argument to back up the abso- lute goodness of a purely good ...
Pagina 16
... argue for a more open - ended constructive arrangement that stipulates those conditions and rules that curb or redirect our more selfish tendencies . My point is that all of these approaches to ethics represent a movement away from the ...
... argue for a more open - ended constructive arrangement that stipulates those conditions and rules that curb or redirect our more selfish tendencies . My point is that all of these approaches to ethics represent a movement away from the ...
Pagina 24
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Pagina 25
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Cuprins
SelfFulfillment Through Selflessness The Moral Teachings of the Daode Jing | 21 |
Ethical Insights from Chu Hsi | 49 |
Concrete Ethics in a Comparative Perspective Zhuangzi Meets William James | 67 |
Preparing for Something that Never Happens The MeansEnds Problem in Modern Culture | 93 |
Ethics in Cultural Context Variety or Relativism? | 117 |
Pluralism in Practice Incommensurability and Constraints on Change in Ethical Discourses | 119 |
The Moral Interpretation of Culture | 139 |
Ethics in a Diverse World of Conflict Gender Law and Medicine | 173 |
Human Rights Law Religion and the Gendered Moral Order | 203 |
The Enlightenment Paradigm of Native Right and Forged Hybridity of Cultural Rights in British India | 235 |
Suicide Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia A Buddhist Perspective | 263 |
In Extremis Abortion and Assisted Suicide from a Buddhist Perspective | 283 |
Good Clinical Practice? Can East Asia Accommodate Western Standards? | 317 |
Selected Bibliography | 329 |
337 | |
About the Contributors | 345 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
abstract action argue argument Arhat Asian assisted suicide Bangladesh become Buddha Catholic Channa chapter Chinese Chu Hsi Chu's claim conception concrete Confucian Confucius Constitution context culture Daode jing death discourse discussion enlightenment ethical systems ethical theory euthanasia example fact faith fetus forms freedom gender goal Guodian Hindu human rights idea ideal important incommensurable India individual International interpretation Islamic issues Japan Japanese Kant Kashiwagi Keown kind language living MacIntyre Mawangdui means modern mono no aware moral Murasaki Murasaki Shikibu Muslim nature norms one's patient person perspective philosophical political practice pragmatism principles problem question reason regard religion religious reproductive rights response rules seems sense situations skandhas social suggests Tale of Genji Taoism teachings things thought tion traditional translation truth understanding United Nations University Press values vinnana Weber Western women women's human rights women's rights wuwei York Zhuangzi