Praiseworthiness : The Lighter Side of Moral Responsibility
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0198919816
ISBN-13
9780198919810
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Nov 6th, 2025
Print length
216 Pages
Product Classification:
Philosophy of languageEthics & moral philosophySocial & political philosophy
Ksh 14,350.00
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Zoë Johnson King argues that we're fundamentally praiseworthy for good will, which involves caring about things that really matter and trying to benefit or support those things, and that we can get "extra bonus points" for the good outcomes of our actions if (but only if) they reflect our good will.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read on the Oxford Academic platform and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.Philosophers have had a lot to say about moral blameworthiness, but much less about moral praiseworthiness. In this book Zoë Johnson King bucks the trend: she offers a conceptual framework with which to theorise about praiseworthiness in its own right, and a comprehensive theory of the types of thing for which we can be praiseworthy and the substantive conditions under which we are praiseworthy for things of each type. Johnson King argues that what we''re fundamentally praiseworthy for — what makes us good people, to the extent that we are — are what we care about and what we try to do. She then argues that we can be praiseworthy for what we successfully do and bring about to the extent that our actions are deliberate and are coming from a good place. In developing this account, Johnson King draws on resources from moral metaphysics, moral epistemology, moral metasemantics, and philosophy of action, as well as from the philosophical literature on moral responsibility. She then uses her account to shed light on some practical issues concerning improving your own praiseworthiness by working on yourself, the prevalence of moral luck, and the impact of oppression and injustice on praiseworthiness. The final chapter turns from praiseworthiness to the ethics of praise: Johnson King takes the backlash against praise of essential workers during the pandemic as a case study that illustrates an array of pitfalls around which we must delicately skirt when attempting to praise the praiseworthy.
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