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Index
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Preface: An Antimanual of Ethics
Acknowledgments
Introduction: What Is the Use of Thought Experiments?
Part I: Problems, Dilemmas, and Paradoxes: Nineteen Moral Puzzles
1. Emergencies
2. The Child Who Is Drowning in a Pond
3. A Transplant Gone Mad
4. Confronting a Furious Crowd
5. The Killer Trolley
6. Incest in All Innocence
7. The Amoralist
8. The Experience Machine
9. Is a Short and Mediocre Life Preferable to No Life at All?
10. I Would Have Preferred Never to Have Been Born
11. Must We Eliminate Animals in Order to Liberate Them?
12. The Utility Monster
13. A Violinist Has Been Plugged Into Your Back
14. Frankenstein, Minister of Health
15. Who Am I Without My Organs?
16. And If Sexuality Were Free?
17. It Is Harder to Do Good Intentionally Than It Is to Do Evil
18. We Are Free, Even If Everything Is Written in Advance
19. Monsters and Saints
Part II: The Ingredients of the Moral “Cuisine”
20. Intuitions and Rules
21. A Little Method!
22. What Remains of Our Moral Intuitions?
23. Where Has the Moral Instinct Gone?
24. A Philosopher Aware of the Limits of His Moral Intuitions Is Worth Two Others, Indeed More
25. Understand the Elementary Rules of Moral Reasoning
26. Dare to Criticize the Elementary Rules of Moral Argument
Conclusion
Glossary
Notes
Index
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