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Practical Rules: When We Need Them and When We Don't

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Rules proliferate; some are kept with a bureaucratic stringency bordering on the absurd, while others are manipulated and ignored in ways that injure our sense of justice. Under what conditions should we make exceptions to rules, and when should they be followed despite particular circumstances? The two dominant models in the current literature on rules are the particularist account and that which sees the application of rules as normative. Taking a position that falls between these two extremes, Alan Goldman is the first to provide a systematic framework to clarify when we need to follow rules in our moral, legal, and prudential decisions, and when we ought not to do so.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published September 5, 1997

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Alan H. Goldman

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84 reviews7 followers
June 19, 2017
The author's worldview is laughably small. The book is of no use, the only highlights are the figures he quoted, and as for the rest, he indulges in his extremely subjective opinions. It's so broken.
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