Description

Book Synopsis
Observe social distancing. Tip your waiter. Give priority to the elderly. Stop at the red light. Pay your taxes. Do not chew with your mouth open. These are imperatives we face every day, imposed upon us by norms that happen to be generally accepted in our environment. Call these ''socially constructed norms''. A constant presence in our lives, these norms elicit mixed feelings. On the one hand, we treat them as valid standards of behaviour and respond to their violation with emotions such disapproval, resentment, and guilt. On the other hand, we look at them with suspicion: after all, they are arbitrary human constructs that may contribute to oppression and injustice. In light of this ambivalence, it is important to have a criterion telling us when, if ever, we are morally bound by socially constructed norms and when we should instead disregard them. Morality and Socially Constructed Norms systematically develops such a criterion. It traces the moral significance of those norms to the

Table of Contents
Introduction 1: What Are Socially Constructed Norms? 2: Grounding the Moral Force of Socially Constructed norms 3: The Agency-Respect View 4: Grounding Moral rights 5: Grounding Political Obligation 6: Explaining the Wrong of Sovereignty Violations Conclusion Bibliography

Morality and Socially Constructed Norms

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    A Hardback by Laura Valentini

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      View other formats and editions of Morality and Socially Constructed Norms by Laura Valentini

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 10/11/2023
      ISBN13: 9780192845795, 978-0192845795
      ISBN10: 0192845799

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Observe social distancing. Tip your waiter. Give priority to the elderly. Stop at the red light. Pay your taxes. Do not chew with your mouth open. These are imperatives we face every day, imposed upon us by norms that happen to be generally accepted in our environment. Call these ''socially constructed norms''. A constant presence in our lives, these norms elicit mixed feelings. On the one hand, we treat them as valid standards of behaviour and respond to their violation with emotions such disapproval, resentment, and guilt. On the other hand, we look at them with suspicion: after all, they are arbitrary human constructs that may contribute to oppression and injustice. In light of this ambivalence, it is important to have a criterion telling us when, if ever, we are morally bound by socially constructed norms and when we should instead disregard them. Morality and Socially Constructed Norms systematically develops such a criterion. It traces the moral significance of those norms to the

      Table of Contents
      Introduction 1: What Are Socially Constructed Norms? 2: Grounding the Moral Force of Socially Constructed norms 3: The Agency-Respect View 4: Grounding Moral rights 5: Grounding Political Obligation 6: Explaining the Wrong of Sovereignty Violations Conclusion Bibliography

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