1. Basic Human Goods or Purposes
A. Choices--deliberation: for a Reason
B. Ultimate Reasons for Acting
C. Not arbitrary: the various ways in which we are fulfilled /
2. Practical Intelligence
A. Reasoning about what is to be done—ordering
B. Starting Points, First Principles: First Practical Judgments
C. Basic Practical Propositions /
3. The Basic Goods
1. Life and Health
2. Speculative Knowledge
3. Aesthetic Experience
4. Play and Skillful Performance
5. Friendship and Society
6. Self-Integration or Inner Harmony
7. Practical Reasonableness
8. Religion
9. Marriage
4. Two Ways of Choosing
A. Fully in accord with all of these basic principles
Fully reasonably—recta ratio
B. Not fully in according with all of them
C. Fully in accord with a love for integral human fulfillment, or not /
5. Some Implications
A. Ought not to be deterred by sheer inertia
B. Ought to pursue a genuine good—not just pleasure apart from what is really fulfilling
Continued
C. Choice ought not to be determined by partiality
D. Ought not to choose precisely against a basic good
6. Utilitarianism
A. Greatest good in the long run
B. No moral absolutes
C. Problem: incommensurability of options for choice / / /