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(1972) Linguistic analysis and phenomenology, Dordrecht, Springer.

Doing good and suffering evil

James Daly

pp. 209-218

Is it a moral outrage that a man should suffer as a result of, or in spite of, acting justly? Or is it improper to expect that "the way things go' (to use D. Z. Phillips's phrase) should satisfy moral demands ? The thesis of the pointlessness of morality, that virtue is its own reward, may answer the question in his own case for the mature moral agent. But can the just man — even if his own sufferings are disregarded in the light of the importance of acting morally — regard with equanimity the sufferings of the innocent and the morally undeveloped: children, mental defectives ?

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-01215-2_15

Full citation:

Daly, J. (1972)., Doing good and suffering evil, in W. Mays (ed.), Linguistic analysis and phenomenology, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 209-218.

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