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Praise and Blame: Moral Realism and Its Applications (New Forum Books)
 
 
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Praise and Blame: Moral Realism and Its Applications (New Forum Books) [Hardcover]

Daniel N. Robinson (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

July 9, 2002 New Forum Books

How should a prize be awarded after a horse race? Should it go to the best rider, the best person, or the one who finishes first? To what extent are bystanders blameworthy when they do nothing to prevent harm? Are there any objective standards of moral responsibility with which to address such perennial questions? In this fluidly written and lively book, Daniel Robinson takes on the prodigious task of setting forth the contours of praise and blame. He does so by mounting an important and provocative new defense of a radical theory of moral realism and offering a critical appraisal of prevailing alternatives such as determinism and behaviorism and of their conceptual shortcomings.

The version of moral realism that arises from Robinson's penetrating inquiry--an inquiry steeped in Aristotelian ethics but deeply informed by modern scientific knowledge of human cognition--is independent of cognition and emotion. At the same time, Robinson carefully explores how such human attributes succeed or fail in comprehending real moral properties. Through brilliant analyses of constitutional and moral luck, of biosocial and genetic versions of psychological determinism, and of relativistic-anthropological accounts of variations in moral precepts, he concludes that none of these conceptions accounts either for the nature of moral properties or the basis upon which they could be known. Ultimately, the theory that Robinson develops preserves moral properties even while acknowledging the conditions that undermine the powers of human will.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

The richness of this work cannot be comprehended in one reading. Whether the reader agrees or not with the author, one has much to learn from the profundity of Robinson's insight into the framing of moral judgment. The reader comes away feeling that this book is a prolegomenon to an expanded version of one or more themes treated within these pages. -- Jude P. Dougherty, Review of Metaphysics

From the Inside Flap

"This book is a significant contribution to the analytic study of ethics, to the history of ethics, and to the growing field of philosophical psychology. It also offers a hope of common ground between those who study ethics in the analytic way and those who approach it in a way that makes contact with traditional metaphysical outlooks such as that of Aristotle. All serious writers in ethics will want to test their own views in the light of what Robinson has to say. The book should be in all college and university libraries; but it is, I think, so well written that it will attract many nonacademic readers who are interested in ethics. Robinson's prose is correct, clear, supple, elegant, and witty; if only all philosophers could write as well as this unusual psychologist/philosopher/classicist!"--Edward Pols, Bowdoin College

"Praise and Blame is a terrific book that will be read with pleasure and profit by scholars in ethics, political theory, law, and related fields. It will appeal both to specialists and to sophisticated nonspecialists. People who are looking for an original take on perennial philosophical questions won't be disappointed. At the same time, readers who are interested in learning what the best classical and contemporary thinkers have had to say about the freedom of the will and its relationship to the moral evaluation of human conduct will find the book more than instructive."--Robert P. George, Princeton University


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (July 9, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691057249
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691057248
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #958,841 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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31 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Panning for Gold, September 8, 2003
By 
This review is from: Praise and Blame: Moral Realism and Its Applications (New Forum Books) (Hardcover)
Daniel Robinson was actually born in or near what is now called Greece on or about 400 BC. Recently awakened from hibernation, his lectures for The Teaching Company on "the Great Ideas of Philosophy" are a tour de force, challenged only by a series of lectures on the "Great Ideas of Psychology" and on "Ancient Greece". Well credentialed, he is a Neuro Psychologist by training who has ventured into classical scholarship and "the love of wisdom" by inclination.

He reinforces my preconceived notions about those who are captured by foolish consistency, currently called "post moderns" or "de-constructionists" or "predistination materialists" (my term) as valuably recycling trivial truths.

This is a deep, humourous book of great seriousness. The only fault, is that, like Stephen Gould, Robinson knows too much and at times cannot resist telling us.

Robinson is a moral realist; i.e.; he believes that moral truths are at least as true as super strings or MBranes or for that matter genes or alleles. But as a moral realist, he also believes that "there is a limit to respect and tolerance, and that limnit is reached when fundamental moral tenets are violated" and in the possibility that "at any given time in world history, there are no identifiable occupants in the defined moral space!".

Unlike this review (but like Robinson's lectures) this book is filled with nuggets that make the investment in time and money well worthwhile.

For those seriously interested in how the world works and tired of the foolish consistencies of Dawkins, Dennett and Rorty, wade into this book. If nothing else, the one liners are great fun even as they are subtle and too often hidden.

On substance, I consider this book off the scale.

Sam Taylor

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
PRAISE AND BLAME are central features of scripture, of ethics and moral philosophy, of ancient schools of rhetoric, of criminal and civil law, of the behavioral and social sciences. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
real moral properties, moral ascriptions, incompatibilist freedom, constitutive luck, radical determinism, moral compassion, moral appraisal, ontological standing, moral realism, moral luck, offending action, hard determinism, moral realist
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Thomas Reid, Anna Karenina, Bernard Williams, Williams's Gauguin, Thomas Aquinas, William James, Edward Pols, Galen Strawson, Peter Strawson, Richard Swinburne, Roger Crisp, Thomas Nagel, Alfred Mele, Aristotle's Rhetoric, Daniel Dennett, Mother Teresa, Richard Sorabji, Robert Kane, United States, Vera Sauer
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