Stoner and Swartwood's
Doing Practical Ethics is the first book to offer a framework for acquiring the component skills required to philosophize about applied ethics. The book accomplishes this by providing clear Explanations and models of basic argument and critical thinking skills, Demonstration Exercises with solutions that provide clear and immediate feedback, and further Practice Exercises for honing skills.
This skill-focused textbook can be used in any intro to ethics or intro to contemporary moral problems course. It is equally useful for any applied ethics course, such as Bioethics, Business Ethics, and Environmental Ethics. It teaches students, through practice, how to analyze, evaluate, and construct moral arguments. Most instructors would also assign a reader or a set of custom readings.
About the AuthorIan M. Stoner is Instructor of Philosophy at Saint Paul College. He earned his PhD from the University of Minnesota and is the author of articles in Journal of the American Philosophical Association, Journal of Applied Philosophy, Res Philosophica, Metaphilosophy, and Teaching Philosophy.
Jason D. Swartwood is Instructor in the Department of Philosophy at Saint Paul College. He earned his PhD from the University of Minnesota and has received several teaching awards, including being a nominee for the 2018 Minnesota State Educator of the Year. His published work focuses on practical wisdom, moral reasoning, and philosophical pedagogy and has appeared in Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, The Journal of Moral Education, Teaching Ethics, Philosophical Explorations, Think: Philosophy for Everyone, The Cambridge Handbook of Wisdom (edited by Robert Sternberg and Judith Glück), and Wisdom: An Introduction (forthcoming, edited by Sternberg and Glück).