Distant Strangers: Ethics, Psychology, and Global Poverty
Cambridge University Press, 10/24/2013
EAN 9780521763318, ISBN10: 0521763312
Hardcover, 286 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm
Language: English
What must affluent people do to alleviate global poverty? This question has occupied moral and political philosophers for forty years. But the controversy has reached an impasse: approaches like utilitarianism and libertarianism either demand too much of ordinary mortals or else let them off the hook. In Distant Strangers, Judith Lichtenberg shows how a preoccupation with standard moral theories and with the concepts of duty and obligation have led philosophers astray. She argues that there are serious limits to what can be demanded of ordinary human beings, but this does not mean we must abandon the moral imperative to reduce poverty. Drawing on findings from behavioral economics and psychology, she shows how we can motivate better-off people to lessen poverty without demanding unrealistic levels of moral virtue. Lichtenberg argues convincingly that this approach is not only practically, but morally, appropriate.
1. Introduction
2. Entanglements and the claims of mere humanity
3. Duties and rights, charity and justice
4. 'Negative' and 'positive' duties
5. Oughts and cans
6. Why people do what others do - and why that's not so bad
7. Whose poor?/Who's poor?
Deprivation within and across borders
8. Hopefully helping
the perils of giving
9. Motives and morality
10. Conclusion
morality for mere mortals.