Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Doing the Right Thing: An Appraisal
DOING THE RIGHT THING: DVD Series
Special Pricing
Moderated by Fox News’ Brit Hume, and Co-Hosted by BreakPoint’s Chuck Colson, and Princeton’s Robert George, in this series a distinguished panel of experts offers a substantive, resourceful and engaging discussion on ethics at the intersection of moral epistemology, cultural analysis, applied ethics, and theological-philosophical anthropology:
Panelists include Acton Institute’s Michael Miller, David Miller, and Glenn Sunshine.
In six 30 minute DVD sessions, the panel discusses the following before a live student audience at Princeton:
I appreciate how the above topics interrelate with each other. Clearly, the series intends to utilize the current “crisis” ethos punctuated by the financial crisis as a prompt to ask the deeper, worldview sorts of questions about knowledge of what is good and how to live in it. But the series does not start and end with individual, moralistic navel-gazing, which so often abounds with “privatized morality” habits of thought. The series decisively connects the centrality of both the sound development of the “inner life” and the “outer life’s” character formation. A thick concept of human flourishing pervades this DVD series: Human beings are not only free but are designed to flourish in virtue.
Special Pricing
Moderated by Fox News’ Brit Hume, and Co-Hosted by BreakPoint’s Chuck Colson, and Princeton’s Robert George, in this series a distinguished panel of experts offers a substantive, resourceful and engaging discussion on ethics at the intersection of moral epistemology, cultural analysis, applied ethics, and theological-philosophical anthropology:
Panelists include Acton Institute’s Michael Miller, David Miller, and Glenn Sunshine.
In six 30 minute DVD sessions, the panel discusses the following before a live student audience at Princeton:
- How did we get into this mess? (connecting the “crisis of ethics” with the “financial crisis”)
- Is there truth or a moral law that we can all know? (natural moral law theory)
- If we know what is right, can we do it? (character formation)
- What does it mean to be human, and why does it matter?
- Ethics in the Market Place (morality of capitalism and business ethics)
- Ethics in Public Life (professional and political ethics).
I appreciate how the above topics interrelate with each other. Clearly, the series intends to utilize the current “crisis” ethos punctuated by the financial crisis as a prompt to ask the deeper, worldview sorts of questions about knowledge of what is good and how to live in it. But the series does not start and end with individual, moralistic navel-gazing, which so often abounds with “privatized morality” habits of thought. The series decisively connects the centrality of both the sound development of the “inner life” and the “outer life’s” character formation. A thick concept of human flourishing pervades this DVD series: Human beings are not only free but are designed to flourish in virtue.
BENEFITS
There are several worthwhile benefits to this DVD series. Below are some that come to mind:- It provides a workable framework for thinking about moral knowledge and its importance for character formation and development (here, one could supplement the DVD series with Dallas Willard’s Knowing Christ Today and David Horner’s Mind Your Faith).
- It connects the realities of the current “financial crisis” with correlating moral problems like the “crisis in ethics.”
- It offers discussion about character formation and not simply a primer on ethical theory.
- It recognizes that capitalism as an economic system is not amoral but that economic life and endeavoring must be bound by knowledge of what is good.
- It is interested in helping people conform to moral reality and not simply a discussion about the dialectic of historical or contemporary ethical theories.
- It could be usefully incorporated, in whole or in part, in different learning environments.
- It has a resourceful leader study guide, with helpful outlines, discussion prompts and recommendations to read more (although, mostly web sources at the Colson Center for Christian Worldview).
Labels: Acton Institute, capitalism, Doing the Right Thing, economics, ethics, morality of economics