Some people do far more than morality requires: consider the doctor who travels to a remote or dangerous area to treat the sick. I offer an account of what these “moral saints” look like and argue that their behavior influences the moral obligations faced by the rest of us. According to Susan Wolf’s prominent account, moral saints are necessarily unattractive—dull-witted, bland, obsessive—and thus unworthy as personal ideals. I argue that this view renders saints self-defeating and relies on an unfounded moralization of nonmoral character traits. I then show that a distinction between two types of moral motivation bears on whether moral saints appear unattractive. An agent can be motivated directly by the features that make an act morally ...
Are ordinary moral agents able to follow the moral lead of heroes and saints? In her
 Exemplaris...
In “Saints and Heroes,” J. O. Urmson (1958) defines moral saints by reference to their supererogator...
The question of the moral demands that humans, posthumans, and nonhumans in the Anthropocene put up ...
Some people do far more than morality requires: consider the doctor who travels to a remote or dange...
Most of us have never met a moral saint, and so it may be diffi cult for us to imagine what such a p...
Attempts to define morality or stress its importance are the center of ethical debates that aim to p...
I defend the continuing importance, and attraction of, moral saints. The objective of this paper is ...
Moral exemplars are often depicted as those who go to extraordinary lengths in preventing suffering ...
A commonly accepted claim by philosophers investigating the nature of evil is that the evil person ...
Contemporary moral philosophy tends to treat saints as either maximally moral and thus exemplary onl...
Evolutionary theorists since Darwin have viewed morality as a system designed for altruism. However,...
A number of philosophers have been impressed with the thought that moral saints and moral monsters—o...
What is the purpose of moral judgment? In the present chapter, we argue that the goal of moral cogni...
ABSTRACT—When people’s rationality and agency are im-plicitly called into question by the more exped...
This article explores the forms of moral repair that the wrongdoer has to perform in an attempt to m...
Are ordinary moral agents able to follow the moral lead of heroes and saints? In her
 Exemplaris...
In “Saints and Heroes,” J. O. Urmson (1958) defines moral saints by reference to their supererogator...
The question of the moral demands that humans, posthumans, and nonhumans in the Anthropocene put up ...
Some people do far more than morality requires: consider the doctor who travels to a remote or dange...
Most of us have never met a moral saint, and so it may be diffi cult for us to imagine what such a p...
Attempts to define morality or stress its importance are the center of ethical debates that aim to p...
I defend the continuing importance, and attraction of, moral saints. The objective of this paper is ...
Moral exemplars are often depicted as those who go to extraordinary lengths in preventing suffering ...
A commonly accepted claim by philosophers investigating the nature of evil is that the evil person ...
Contemporary moral philosophy tends to treat saints as either maximally moral and thus exemplary onl...
Evolutionary theorists since Darwin have viewed morality as a system designed for altruism. However,...
A number of philosophers have been impressed with the thought that moral saints and moral monsters—o...
What is the purpose of moral judgment? In the present chapter, we argue that the goal of moral cogni...
ABSTRACT—When people’s rationality and agency are im-plicitly called into question by the more exped...
This article explores the forms of moral repair that the wrongdoer has to perform in an attempt to m...
Are ordinary moral agents able to follow the moral lead of heroes and saints? In her
 Exemplaris...
In “Saints and Heroes,” J. O. Urmson (1958) defines moral saints by reference to their supererogator...
The question of the moral demands that humans, posthumans, and nonhumans in the Anthropocene put up ...