1st Edition
Questioning Beneficence Four Philosophers on Effective Altruism and Doing Good
Introduction
Samuel Arnold, Jason F. Brennan, Richard Yetter Chappell, and Ryan W. Davis
Part I The Political Perils of Doing Good
Samuel Arnold
1. The Political Perils of Doing Good
2. Brennan’s Response to Arnold
3. Chappell’s Response to Arnold
4. Davis’s Response to Arnold
5. Arnold’s Response to Brennan, Chappell, and Davis
Part II Effective Altruism and Regular People
Jason F. Brennan
6. Effective Altruism and Regular People
7. Arnold’s Response to Brennan
8. Chappell’s Response to Brennan
9. Davis’s Response to Brennan
10. Brennan’s Response to Arnold, Chappell, and Davis
Part III Exploring Beneficence
Richard Yetter Chappell
11. Exploring Beneficence
12. Arnold’s Response to Chappell
13. Brennan’s Response to Chappell
14. Davis’s Response to Chappell
15. Chappell’s Response to Arnold, Brennan, and Davis
Part IV Limiting Beneficence
Ryan W. Davis
16. Limiting Beneficence
17. Arnold’s Response to Davis
18. Brennan’s Response to Davis
19. Chappell’s Response to Davis
20. Davis’s Response to Arnold, Brennan, and Chappell
Bibliography
Index
Biography
Samuel Arnold is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Texas Christian University, USA. His research interests include liberalism, economic justice, and alternatives to capitalism.
Jason F. Brennan is Robert J. and Elizabeth Flanagan Family Professor of Strategy, Economics, Ethics, and Public Policy at the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University, USA. He specializes in politics, philosophy, and economics and is the author of 16 books, including Why It's OK to Want to Be Rich (Routledge, 2020), Markets Without Limits (Routledge, 2016, with Peter Jaworksi), and Why Not Capitalism? (Routledge, 2nd Edition, 2024).
Richard Yetter Chappell is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Miami, USA. His primary research interests are in ethical theory, especially the defense and development of consequentialism. Chappell is the author of Parfit’s Ethics (Cambridge University Press, 2021), and he blogs about moral philosophy at goodthoughts.blog.
Ryan W. Davis is Associate Professor of Political Science at Brigham Young University, USA. He writes about the value of autonomy in ethics, politics, and religion. He is the author of Why It’s OK to Own a Gun (Routledge, 2024).
"This is an excellent book, and it provides a helpful survey of the area while simultaneously exploring many arguments and ideas in significant depth. Arnold, Brennan, Chappell, and Davis provide a good diversity of perspectives on beneficence—Effective Altruism in particular—and when it is good, just, virtuous, and morally required. In each of the four parts, the authors collectively demonstrate that the issues discussed are rich and multidimensional; there are often more than just two sides to take (sometimes there are at least four!)." - Theron Pummer, University of Saint Andrews, UK






