Killing and Other Dastardly Deeds

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Abnormal event
Absolutist
Absolutist sensibilities
Accelerating death
Air polo
Air travel
Ante
Ante calculation
Author_John Hawthorne
Badness
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Burger condensation
Burger joint
Burger roulette
Burger stacking
Burger trade
Burgers
Butterfly effects
Cannonball
Canonical
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Category=QDTQ
Causative verbs
Commercial air travel
Commonsense morality
Competition argument
Consequentialism
Consequentialist
Constitutively relevant
Contractualism
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
Ethics
Ex ante
Ex complaint
forthcoming
Frick
Jones
Jones smith
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Lexically ordered
Lexically ordered utilities
Lottery
Lottery ticket
Max gratitude
Motive consequentialism
Null insertion
Optimific design
Paralysis
Plausible
Prima facie
Punched nose
Reasonable precautions
Red hat
Roulette
Rule consequentialist
Russian roulette
Scanlon
Sensible motive consequentialism
Shocks continue
Smith
Smith jones
Special disvalue
Transmitter
Transmitter room
Trifling goods
Universal approval
Vaccination
Worldly goods

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691285092
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A powerful and probing critique of the ethical permissibility of serious harms

In Killing and Other Dastardly Deeds, eminent philosopher John Hawthorne rigorously probes the commonsense morality of killing and other serious harms, exposing troubling issues at the foundations of ethical thought.

The book addresses the ethical significance of causatives, focusing on the contrast between actions that are killings and those that aren’t killings, but which hasten death. It offers an extensive critique of popular contractualist treatments of the wrongness of harming people. It also investigates the popular absolutist idea that one should never perform an action that will with certainty kill someone when the only upside is an array of trifling goods. Along the way, readers learn just how difficult it is to embed various standard ethical ideas into a sensible normative theory of decision making.

Drawing many connections with areas of philosophy beyond ethics, and making important contributions at the intersection of ethics and decision theory, Killing and Other Dastardly Deeds is an insightful critique of absolutist prohibitions on killing.

John Hawthorne is Provost Professor of Philosophy and the Linda MacDonald Hilf Chair in Philosophy at the University of Southern California. He is the author of Metaphysical Essays and Knowledge and Lotteries and the coauthor of The Bounds of Possibility, Narrow Content, The Reference Book, and Relativism and Monadic Truth.

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