Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 220
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-1-4422-1126-1 • Paperback • April 2015 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-1-4422-4912-7 • eBook • April 2015 • $47.50 • (£37.00)
Naomi Zack is a professor of philosophy at the University of Oregon.
Chapter 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 Introduction: Ethics, Mores, and Race
Chapter 3 Chapter 1: Plato and Aristotle's Invention of Race
Chapter 4 Chapter 2: Cosmopolitan Contributions to an Ethics of Race
Chapter 5 Chapter 3: Natural Law and Inequality
Chapter 6 Chapter 4: Moral Law and Slavery
Chapter 7 Chapter 5: Christian Metaphysics and Inequality
Chapter 8 Chapter 6: Social Contract Theory and the Sovereign Nation State
Chapter 9 Chapter 7: Deontology, Utilitarianism, and Rights
Chapter 10 Conclusion: Egalitarian Humanism and Requirements for an Ethics of Race
Chapter 11 Select Bibliography
Chapter 12 About the Author
Naomi Zack's magisterial and monumental work in the ethics of race is an intellectual tour-de-force that takes the reader on an exciting scholarly journey through the history of moral philosophy. Zack is both a philosophical detective combing the history of moral philosophy and a constructive theoretician who in the end give us twelve rich, original, and insightful requirements for an ethics of race.
— Jason D. Hill, De Paul University
This lucidly written book emphasizes the important distinction between ethics and mores and demonstrates how dominance of the latter poses challenges for struggles against racism. Arguing for egalitarian humanism, Naomi Zack advances an outline for what she calls “an ethics of race,” a critical position encompassing several considerations for living in a world riddled by a minefield of racial impositions and challenges. The virtues of this book are many. It brings nuance to Zack's nearly two decades of work on problems of race and racism, and it outlines the terrain of ethics and moral philosophy (the normative landscape) in ways accessible to students and thought-provoking for scholars in the fields of ethics, political thought, and critical race theory.
— Lewis R. Gordon, professor of philosophy and Africana studies, University of Connecticut
Most books on ethics and race have focused on applied ethics issues, like affirmative action. In this highly original and challenging discussion, Naomi Zack sets out to answer a different and harder question: how to construct an "ethics of race" in the light of the history of ethics in Western philosophy.
— Charles Mills, John Evans Professor of Moral and Intellectual Philosophy, Northwestern University