".a splendid tract detailing some of the arguments by which we can persuade people to act morally." <i>Times Higher Education Supplement</i>
1. Motives, Moral and Otherwise.
Part I: The Moral Tack:.
2. Reciprocity and the Duty of Fair Play.
3. Uncertainty and Impartiality.
4. Non-exploitation.
Part II: The Political Tack:.
5. Extending the Franchise.
6. Entrenched Rights and Constitutional Restraints.
7. Publicity, Accountability and Discursive Defensibility.
Part III: Conclusions:.
8. Infusing Morality into Politics.
9. Taking Morality out of Politics.
References.
A central theme is how rarely we need for people to act upon unabashedly moral motives. For most purposes cold calculations of self-interest, in some suitably extended sense, are all that is really needed to induce people to behave as morality would require. Reciprocity - the threat that others will do as they are done by - will often suffice to make people behave fairly. Uncertainty - the prospect of soon finding yourself in the position of the other - is often enough to induce people to weigh impartially the interests of all. However, there inevitably remains a subset of frightfully vulnerable people whom others have no self-interested reasons not to exploit. To secure decent treatment for them, we must appeal directly and exclusively to people's sense of morality.
Robert Goodin explores these themes through the imaginative use of anecdotes and examples in a way that will make this book a treasury of political wisdom for academics, policymakers and citizens alike.