Where Can I Find It?

Where Can I Find It?

Author: Muffy Kaesberg

Publisher: Organizing 4 U

Published: 2008-09-26

Total Pages: 30

ISBN-13: 1440468222

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Would you know important contact information for members of your family if they needed someone to step in during an emergency? Do you know what would happen to the day to day functioning of your household in the case of an emergency? Are you able to locate important telephone numbers, addresses and policy numbers at a moment's notice?The June 2008 issue of Money recommended the creation of a "single guide" to store important information. This "should cover: monthly bills...bank accounts... retirement accounts...brokerage and fund accounts...insurance policies...wills and medical directives..."Created by the Organizing 4 U team of Muffy Kaesberg and JoEllen Salkin, Where Can I Find It?(c) provides plenty of room to complete all the above information and more!


Leaving Morality where it is

Leaving Morality where it is

Author: Daniel Patrone

Publisher: Lexington Books

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 172

ISBN-13: 9780739109731

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Debates in moral theory have reached something of a deadlock due entirely to the concept of "contingency." Contingencies are features of the world, some outside ourselves, and some a part of ourselves, over which we lack control. For philosophers who describe the role and value of morality in a secular world, contingency threatens to undermine both the possibility of achieving happiness and the preconditions thought necessary for moral responsibility. In light of all this, there remains persistent debate amongst two especially established and pronounced positions. Kantians have long criticized Aristotelian "eudaimonism" for its failure to secure human happiness. Eudaimonists have, on the other hand, long criticized Kantianism for its inability to give a coherent account of moral responsibility and judgment. The debate surrounding contingency has therefore emerged as something of a litmus test for the acceptability of a moral theory. Both Kantians and Eudaimonists agree that any attempt to deal with the problems of contingency will force an abandonment of something important in our actual moral commitments and, as a result, the problems of contingency cannot, as Bernard Williams has written, "leave morality where it was." In this original new work Daniel Patrone makes clear the history and implications of this debate. Emerging from out of the deadlock between the Kantian and the Eudaimonist position is the particularist position. Leaving Morality Where It Is describes and thinks through every facet of this debate. It is an indispensable work for philosophers in general and ethicists (of every stripe) in particular.