Abstract

It seems as if there is a black box between the principles and the particular case. What one can see in large parts of applied ethics is that the input (the moral principles one endorses and the moral problem one faces) and the output (a particular solution to the problem) are known. What one does not get to know, however, is how the latter followed from the former; there is a black box, the internal working (the method) of which remains unknown. The aim of the present book is to clear this black box; its central question is thus: which are the methods that allow for the transparent and rational resolution of particular problems bearing on abstract and general moral principles?

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