Book was in perfect condition, and it only took about 3 days to get it!
1Report
Pojman does an excellent job of covering a lot of ground in this relatively short book. The writing is clear and easy to understand. However, I would not say that this book invites readers to discover their own ethical theories, as the back cover claims, because Pojman clearly discounts certain ethical theories and embraces others. Rather than discovering right and wrong on one's own, the reader instead is led down a path...
0Report
If this book were intended to be a treatise or an original work, maybe I would have some objections. But aiming only to write an introduction of ethics, Louis Pojman has achieved the best one can do, and I don't know of any real competitor in the market. It is the clearest, the most readable and still a very clever introduction to ethics. In his book, Pojman discusses with a clear head items like relativism, ethics of virtue,...
0Report
Readers familiar with ethical literature will notice that the title of Pojman's book is similar to that of the late J.L. Mackie's book on ethics, _Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong_. The differences in titles reflect the differences in opinion among the two authors: Mackie was a relativist while Pojman is an objectivist. Despite Pojman's rejection of relativism, though, he does an admirable job of presenting both sides fairly...
0Report
Dr. Pojman (poy-man) does a brilliant job of presenting the ethics rooted in Arisitotle and Aquinas and the thought of the moderns, such as Kant, in a very easy read. This s a fabulous book for anyone.
0Report