Assorted fruit from forty years' writing, these essays by David
Braybrooke discuss (in Part One of the book) a variety of concrete,
practical topics that ethical concerns bring into politics:
people's interests; their needs as well as their preferences; their
work and their commitment to work; their participation in politics
and in other group activities. Essays follow on the justice with
which theme matters are arranged for and on the common good in
which they are consolidated. Justice here inspires a 'departures'
approach, which moves from agreement on departures from commutative
justice to agreement on measures of distributive justice needed to
forestall such departures. Another essay (first published here)
radically undermines the odd but entrenched belief that
utilitarianism classically licenced, even prescribed,
systematically sacrificing the happiness of some people to give
others greater pleasure. Part II and Part III of the book
concentrate upon the subject of settled social rules, which are
devices for securing the objectives treated in Part I. Part II
shows that rules are ubiquitous in ethics, since there are no
virtues without rules, just as there are no (justified) rules;
without virtues. Part Two also shows that rules are as ubiquitous
in social phenomena as the causal regularities sought by one school
of social science. Part III captures the dialectic of history at
least in part by a logical analysis of changes in rules following
the onset of quandaries. It then considers how political choices
can be both prudent, by keeping within duly considered incremental
limits, and yet imaginative enough to escape the recent
embarrassments generated by social choice theory.
Characteristically versatile in topic and style, Braybrooke
offers original light on all theme subjects. One reader has
commented, ' His prose is elegant and always a pleasure to read.
Some of the pieces are nothing short of brilliant.' Which did the
reader have in mind? Readers may differ (they already have) on just
which pieces they would rank highest.
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