Cover image for Public war, private conscience : the ethics of political violence
Title:
Public war, private conscience : the ethics of political violence
Publication Information:
London, ENK. ; New York : Continuum, 2010.
Physical Description:
xv, 177 p. ; 23 cm.
ISBN:
9781441182586

9781441182814

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30000010254194 U22 F49 2010 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Public War, Private Conscience offers a philosophical reflection on the moral demands made upon us by war, providing a clear and accessible overview of the different ways of thinking about war.

Engaging both with contemporary examples and historical ideas about war, the book offers unique analysis of issues relating to terrorism, conscience objection, just war theory and pacifism. Andrew Fiala examines the conflict between utilitarian and deontological points of view. On the one hand, wars are part of the project of public welfare, subject to utilitarian evaluation. On the other hand, war is also subject to deontological judgment that takes seriously the importance of private conscience and human rights. This book argues that the conflict between these divergent approaches is unavoidable. We are continually caught in the tragic conflict between these two values: public happiness and private morality. And it is in war that we find the conflict at its most obvious and most disturbing.


Author Notes

Andrew Fiala is Professor of Philosophy at California State University, Fresno, USA. He is the author of The Just War Myth (Rowman and Littlefield, 2008), The Philosopher's Voice (SUNY Press, 2002) and Practical Pacifism (Algora


Table of Contents

Introduction
1 The Sublime Grind of Ares
2 The War of Public and Private
3 Plato's Prophecy and Kant's Dream
4 Democratic Control and Professional Ethics
5 The Military Establishment
6 The Democratic Peace Myth: From Kant and Mill to Hiroshima and Baghdad
7 The Vanity of Temporal Things: Hegel and the Ethics of War
8 American Ambivalence: Militarism, Pacificism and Pragmatism
9 Sliding Scales and the Mischief of War
10 Waterboarding, Torture and Violence
11 Conscientious Refusal and the Liberal Tradition
12 Public Myths and Private Protest
Bibliography
Index