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The Best Effect

Theology and the Origins of Consequentialism

Ryan Darr

$57.95

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English
University of Chicago Press
05 March 2024
A theological history of consequentialism and a new, more expansive vision for teleological ethics.

 

Consequentialism—the notion that we can judge an action by its effects alone—has been among the most influential approaches to ethics and public policy in the Anglophone world for more than two centuries. In The Best Effect, Ryan Darr argues that consequentialist ethics is not as secular or as rational as it is often assumed to be. Instead, Darr describes the emergence of consequentialism in the seventeenth century as a theological and cosmological vision and traces its intellectual development and eventual secularization across several centuries. He argues that contemporary consequentialism continues to bear traces of its history and proposes in its place a more expansive vision for teleological ethics.

By:  
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   481g
ISBN:   9780226829999
ISBN 10:   0226829995
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Introduction Part I: The Consequentialist Moral Cosmology Chapter 1: God and Morality in the Seventeenth Century Chapter 2: Virtue and the Divine Life: Henry More’s Moral Theology Chapter 3: Teleology Transformed: Richard Cumberland’s Perfectionist Natural Law Epilogue to Part I Part II: Evil and the Divine Consequentialist Chapter 4: Evil and the Consequentialist Moral Cosmology: Pierre Bayle and British Ethics Chapter 5: The Ethics of Archbishop William King’s De origine mali Chapter 6: Shaftesbury the Theologian: Virtue as Friendship with God Chapter 7: Theodicy and the Moral Affections in Francis Hutcheson Epilogue to Part II Part III: The Anglican Utilitarian Synthesis Chapter 8: John Gay’s “Preliminary Dissertation” Chapter 9: Edmund Law and the Anglican Utilitarian Tradition Epilogue to Part III Conclusion Acknowledgments Notes Index

Ryan Darr is a postdoctoral research associate in religion, ecology, and expressive culture at the Yale University Institute of Sacred Music and a lecturer in the Yale Divinity School.

Reviews for The Best Effect: Theology and the Origins of Consequentialism

"“Darr argues that contemporary secular consequentialism emerges out of the attempts of early modern moralists to make sense of God’s creative freedom, the existence of evil, and origins of human morality. This is a strikingly original thesis, defended by a close reading of the British moralists, informed by a keen sense of the philosophical and theological issues at stake. This book challenges our most fundamental assumptions about the history of moral thought and the reasonableness of the ‘greatest good’ as a moral standard.” -- Jean Porter, University of Notre Dame “Theologians and philosophers alike need more books like Darr’s rich account of the religious origins of consequentialist ideas. He brings to life texts most of us have forgotten but to which we owe more than we know. Darr argues that what we now consider a commonsense secular tradition had its origin in theological arguments about divine goodness. The clarity and originality of the story he tells offer a model of historical theology that I hope many will emulate."" -- Jesse Couenhoven, Villanova University “Consequentialism is a dominant ethical framework among contemporary ethicists, economists, legal theorists, and policy makers, particularly in secular circles. Darr’s careful and convincing study reveals that key components of the consequentialist framework arose from theological debates in the early modern period—debates about what an omnipotent and perfectly good being would or should do.” -- Andrew Chignell, Princeton University"


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