000 01319nam a2200229 a 4500
001 nice12345678
003 Monogr.mrc
005 20200112140022.0
008 09-May-16s2002 Newa grp 000 0 eng
020 _a0521807298
_c4920
082 0 0 _aN40
_bG569
100 _aGoldman, Alan H
245 _aPractical Rules
_b When We Need Them and When We Don`t
260 _aNew York
_bCambridge University
_c2002
300 _a210p
500 _aincludes index and biblioraphy
505 2 _a1 Moral Rules I. Outline of the Task II. Types of Rules: Dispensable and Indispensable III. Ordinary Moral Consciousness IV. Rules as Second-Best Strategies V. The Justification of Rules: Strong and Weak VI. Interpretation of Weak Rules 2 Prudential Rules I. Moral and Prudential Rules Compared II. Second-Order Prudential Rules: Optimizing III. A Prudential Rule to Be Moral 3 Legal Rules I. Classification II. The Descriptive Question: Hart, Dworkin, and Others III. The Descriptive Question: Sources of Law IV. The Normative Question 4 Moral Reasoning without Rules I. The Inadequacy of Particularism II. Coherence III. The Reasoning Process Reviewed IV. Objections
700 1 _aGoldman, Alan H
902 _bSFS
942 _cBK
999 _c82052
_d82052