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A Framework for the Good

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This book provides an ethical framework for understanding the good and how we can experience it in increasing measure.
  • 30 November 2021
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This book provides an ethical framework for understanding the good and how we can experience it in increasing measure. In Part 1, Kevin Kinghorn offers a formal analysis of the meaning of the term "good," the nature of goodness, and why we are motivated to pursue it. Setting this analysis within a larger ethical framework, Kinghorn proposes a way of understanding where noninstrumental value lies, the source of normativity, and the relationship between the good and the right. Kinghorn defends a welfarist conception of the good along with the view that mental states alone directly affect a person's well-being. He endorses a Humean account of motivation—in which desires alone motivate us, not moral beliefs—to explain the source of the normative pressure we feel to do the good and the right. Turning to the place of objectivity within ethics, he concludes that the concept of "objective wrongness" is a misguided one, although a robust account of "objective goodness" is still possible. In Part 2, Kinghorn shifts to a substantive, Christian account of what the good life consists in as well as how we can achieve it. Hume's emphasis of desire over reason is not challenged but rather endorsed as a way of understanding both the human capacity for choice and the means by which God prompts us to pursue relationships of benevolence, in which our ultimate flourishing consists.

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Price: $125.00
Pages: 358
Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
Imprint: University of Notre Dame Press
Publication Date: 30 November 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780268203559
Format: Hardcover
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"Kevin Kinghorn's A Framework for the Good sets out and defends in detail a formal meta-ethical position concerning the relationship between the good and the right. It also offers a substantive account of what behaviors will contribute to our good, hence how to discern right from wrong, and describes how Christian theism fills in this account." —Religious Studies Review



“[Kinghorn’s] writing is scholarly, and this book seems to grow naturally out of his previous work. It does, however, stand on its own as an insightful contribution to the long philosophical heritage of examining what the truly good life is. Highly recommended for university and seminary libraries.” —Catholic Library World



“Like David Baggett and Jerry Wells . . . and others, Kinghorn . . . seeks to provide a philosophical treatment of morality that takes Christian theology seriously. Recommended.” —Choice



"A Framework for the Good is a creative and intriguing book. It challenges certain familiar conceptions of the good and the good life while striving to remain faithful to biblical—and specifically Trinitarian—categories. And even if some readers do not agree with Kinghorn’s arguments or certain starting assumptions, their horizons will be expanded and their moral thinking benefited by this bold work." —Paul Copan, Professor and Pledger Family Chair of Philosophy and Ethics at Palm Beach Atlantic University



“A lucidly written, cogent argument for a bold and original thesis well worth the reader’s serious consideration—a proposal not responsibly ignored. Highly recommended.” —David Baggett, co-author of God and Cosmos: Moral Truth and Human Meaning



"This is a terrific work, in many respects. It is ambitious, clear, engaging, and energetic. The better part of the second half of the book makes some original, positive moves in thinking about values from the standpoint of Christian theism. The material is nuanced and well illustrated with analogies and thought experiments. The first half also displays creativity and ingenuity." —Charles Taliaferro, St. Olaf College



"Philosophy in the analytic tradition has long needed a phenomenology for ethics. This book meets the need with an original framework for ethics that aims to be Christian. Contending that only pleasurable mental states have intrinsic value, Kevin Kinghorn advocates for objectivity in matters of goodness and badness but not in matters of rightness and wrongness. He makes illuminating use of the ideas of 'feeling tones' and 'feeling connected to others' to elaborate his phenomenology for ethical relationships. The result is a novel and clarifying treatment of foundational ethical issues with special attention to Christian ethics. Overall, this is a very important contribution to the field of philosophical ethics." —Paul K. Moser, Loyola University Chicago



“Kinghorn offers a detailed exploration of numerous issues related to a topic considered by so many to be exhausted: the value of pursuing a good life.” —Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies



“Mort writes in sentences that are crystal clear, straightforward, and so natural as to disguise the painstaking craft of their making.” —American Book Review

Kevin Kinghorn is professor of philosophy and religion at Asbury Theological Seminary. He is author of The Decision of Faith: Can Christian Beliefs Be Freely Chosen?

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Part 1.Placing the Good within an Ethical Framework

1.The Meaning of Good

1.1 Our Pro-attitude toward the Good

1.2 Flourishing and the Good

1.3 Instrumental Goodness

1.4 Noninstrumental Goodness

1.5 The Morally Good

1.6 Closing Moore’s Open Question

1.7 The Place of Semantic Analysis

2.The Nature of the Good

2.1 Hedonism

2.2 The Inadequate Alternative of Desire Satisfaction

2.3 L. W. Sumner

2.4 Nozick’s Experience Machine

2.5 The Badness of Death

2.6 Is Schadenfreude a Special Problem?

3.Motivations, the Good, and the Right

3.1 Sticking to Humean Guns

3.2 The Source of Normative Force

3.3 The Concepts “Right” and “Wrong”

3.4 Moral Facts and the Place of Objectivity

Part 2. A Christian Framework for Choosing the Good Life four Others and the Good

4. Others and the Good

4.1 Perfectionism

4.2 The Mental Experience of “Connecting”

4.3 Are Relationships the Key to Our Well-Being?

4.4 Making Others’ Interests Our Own

4.5 Divine Coordination

4.6 Establishing Relationships

5. God, the Good, and Our Choices

5.1 The Place of Self-Interested Desires

5.2 Can We Desire Relationships?

5.3 Self-Directed Reasons for Benevolence

5.4 God’s Invitation to Pursue the Good

5.5 Freedom in Choosing the Good

5.6 The Final Dichotomy of Benevolent and Self-Interested Ends six Feeling Our Way toward the Good

6. Feeling Our Way toward the Good

6.1 The Positive Feeling Tones of Benevolence

6.2 “Morally Significant” Decisions

6.3 Feeling Tones as Our Indication of the Good

6.4 Some Theological Connections

Notes

Works Cited

Index