The claim that human agents are vulnerable to tragic conflict, situations in which one cannot help but do wrong, is a commonplace in contemporary moral philosophy. This book draws on Thomas Aquinas’s moral thought in order to delineate an alternative view. While affirming that the human good can be attained only through difficulty, including the difficulty of moral conflict, it argues that Aquinas’s understanding of a natural, hierarchical ordering of human goods allows for the rational resolution of moral conflict in a way that avoids tragic necessity.
. . . [A] marvelously instructive presentation of classic virtue ethics against the commonplace claim in contemporary ethics that human agents are vulnerable to tragic situations in which they cannot help but do wrong.---—Choice
One could not find a better introduction to Aristotle and Aquinas on the sublic.---—The Review of Metaphysics
One could not find a better introduction to Aristotle and Aquinas on the subject.---—Fellowship of Catholic Scholar's Quarterly