Each chapter of this impressive volume sheds abundant light on the history, dynamics, and merits of key strands of ethical thought. Readers will encounter rich new connections between the major approaches to achieving justice and the deepest value commitments behind them, including revealing glimpses of the moral visions that have inspired their representative figures. Highly accessible and recommended for any audience. --Thomas Massaro, SJ, McGinley Endowed Chair in Religion and Society, Fordham University
In Eight Theories of Ethics: Foundations for Practical Decision-Making, Karen Lebacqz and Matthew Gaudet offer an accessible and pragmatic introduction to eight ethical frameworks that influence contemporary moral decision-making. This revision updates chapters devoted to well-known theories and, with chapters on communitarianism and womanist theology, widens the scope to welcome modern voices to the discussion. Lebacqz and Gaudet frame justice as a pragmatic dialogue, and this text invites readers to delve into the push and pull of the exchange of ideas. More than ever, justice is the essential dialogue for our time. Lebacqz and Gaudet have accomplished something rare--they have taken a favorite classic and have made it indispensable to the ongoing conversation. --Grace Chan Oei, director, Center for Christian Bioethics, Loma Linda University School of Medicine
As you try to imagine theorizing justice, test out these eight "fragments" and how Lebacqz and Gaudet have so astutely curated and interrogated them. While these eight must not be the only ones you engage in our wider, globally informed theoretical contexts, this text contributes a stimulating primer for such critical ethical discernment. --Traci C. West, author of Solidarity and Defiant Spirituality: Africana Lessons on Religion, Racism, and Ending Gender Violence
Karen Lebacqz and Matthew Gaudet have enriched this already wonderful book on theories of justice. Lyrically written and carefully considered, it has inspired decades of students in my seminars and remains one of the definitive and classic texts for the study of ethics. --Laurie Zoloth, Margaret E. Burton Professor of Religion and Ethics, University of Chicago
Eight Theories of Justice is exactly what students of philosophy and ethics need--lucid, cogent explorations of the most fundamental ways people understand and debate notions of justice. Lebacqz and Gaudet offer a highly teachable, clear, and engaging discussion of contrasting conceptions of justice, highlighting what some share and where they diverge. An essential resource for philosophers and ethicists alike. I continue to learn from Karen Lebacqz, and now Matthew Gaudet, as this work refreshes and updates a classic text and makes it incredibly relevant and useful in the present day. --Aana Marie Vigen, professor of Christian social ethics, Loyola University Chicago