Preface Sources Introduction 1. Preliminaries 2. Deontology 3. Non-deontology 4. The charge of irrationality 5. The non-equivalence principle 6. Complexity 7. The act concept 8.
The course of nature 9. Facts about behavior 10. Harms 11. The concept of responsibility 12. Determinism, compatibilism, and incompatibilism 13 .Ability to do otherwise and the transfer argument 14. Libertarianism 15. Moral responsibility without free will 16.
Compatibilist responses 17. Defending the principle of alternative possibilities 18. The ideal of equality 19. Responsibility for being worse-off 20. Telic versus deontic egalitarianism 21. In itself bad 22. Is inequality bad or is equality good? 23. Equally well off in terms of what? 24.
Non-distributive egalitarian concerns Deontology 1. Moral status and the impermissibility of minimizing violations 2. In what ways are constraints paradoxical? 3. Are killing and letting die morally equivalent? 4. Life-prolonging killings and their relevance to ethics 5. Two puzzles for deontologists: life-prolonging killings and the moral symmetry between killing and causing a person to be unconscious Moral Responsibility 6. Er determinisme og moralsk ansvar forenelige? 7. Does moral responsibility presuppose alternative possibilities? 8.
Kompatibilisme og moralsk ansvar for undladelser af handlinger 9. Frankfurt, responsibility, and reflexivity 10. Identification and responsibility Equality 11. Arneson on equality of opportunity for welfare 12. Equality and responsibility 13. Egalitarianism, option luck, and responsibility 14. Measuring the disvalue of inequality over time 15. Are some inequalities more unequal than others? Nature, nurture, and equality Appendix I: Methodology Appendix 2: On defending a significant version of the constancy assumption Summary Bibliography.