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Be good : how to navigate the ethics of everything / Randy Cohen.

By: Cohen, RandyPublisher: San Francisco, CA. ; London : Chronicle, 2012Description: 318 pages ill.; 21 cm001: 15211ISBN: 1452107904; 9781452107905Subject(s): Ethical problems -- Miscellanea | Applied ethics -- MiscellaneaDDC classification: 170 LOC classification: BJ1031 | .C568 2012
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY Book PRINT 170 COH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 089534

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

The New York Times Magazine 's original "Ethicist" Randy Cohen helps readers locate their own internal ethical compasses as he delivers answers to life's most challenging dilemmas--timeless and contemporary alike. Organized thematically in an easy-to-navigate Q&A format, and featuring line illustrations throughout, this amusing and engaging book challenges readers to think about how they would (or should) respond when faced with everyday moral challenges, from sex and love to religion, technology, and much more. Sure to ignite brain cells and spark healthy debate, Be Good is a book to refer to again and again.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

Cohen was the author for 12 years of the popular Ethicist column for the New York Times Magazine, in which he addressed readers' questions about ethical issues they faced in their daily lives. Here, after a useful introduction in which he explains his methods and procedures, Cohen collects many of these columns, organized into thematic chapters around such topics as family, doctors and nurses, work, love and sex, money, and religion. Each chapter includes a preliminary essay in which Cohen comments on the general ethical questions surrounding that theme. He does not rely on any formal ethical theory in answering the questions, though he at times is in touch with eminent philosophers including Martha Nussbaum and Peter Singer. Instead, he relies on common sense, sometimes derided, he tells us, as a "gut reaction." But his is common sense informed by wide reading and careful thought. Many of the questions concern issues of honesty, e.g., making a false statement about one's religion to avoid discrimination in a foreign country. -VERDICT Even those who disagree with his answers are likely to recognize that Cohen is an acute and caring writer. Anyone interested in ethical questions-and who is not?-will find this book valuable.-David Gordon, Bowling Green State Univ., OH (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Publishers Weekly Review

Culled from his 12-year tenure as the man behind the The New York Times Magazine's "The Ethicist," this anthology of Cohen's columns, now divided into categories such as "Family," "Money," "Technology," and "Love & Sex," blends nuanced ethical discussions with gentle humor. Although much of the content will be redundant for regular readers of "The Ethicist"-Cohen provides brief essays at the beginning of each chapter, but little else is new-the organization of this book helps clarify Cohen's formation of a code of ethics that is socially progressive and community-based. Although some of the dilemmas presented are thought-provoking on their own, the most interesting portions are those in which Cohen returns to earlier decisions, sharing letters from readers, revising arguments, and discussing controversies that resulted from certain pronouncements. Seeing Cohen defend his decisions against intelligent dissenters and remark how the passage of time has altered his thinking on others is perhaps the most instructive aspect of the book-a demonstration in how to actually practice the art of ethical thinking. One could argue this was Cohen's intention all along; in assembling this volume, what he has created is "a set of practice problems" meant to test and strengthen the reader's own ethical compass. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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