Radford University professor and chair of the Department of Philosophy and Religious
Studies Steven Fesmire is the author of the new book “Beyond Moral Fundamentalism:
Toward a Pragmatic Pluralism.”
Published by Oxford University Press, Fesmire’s book delves into moral fundamentalism,
“the my-way-or-the-highway notion that my group has exclusive access to the right
diagnoses and prescriptions to our moral and political problems,” the professor explains.
“Moral fundamentalism,” Fesmire continues, “causes us to oversimplify problems, neglect
broader context, take refuge in dogmatic absolutes, ignore possibilities for common
ground, assume privileged access to the right way to proceed and shut off honest inquiry.”
In his book, Fesmire describes an alternative approach, pragmatic pluralism, “that
can be applied to complex ethical, political, educational and policy problems. This
approach avoids flattening variability among values or presuming that abstract theories
can determine what we ought to do on the ground.”
In an engaging style, Fesmire argues that the single-right-way premise that logically
underlies moral fundamentalism is both unwarranted and constrictive, and that quests
for unifying moral principles can still be accommodated within a wider pluralistic
approach.
In a post for Oxford University Press’s “Academic Insights for the Thinking World”
blog, Fesmire explores answers to four pressing questions regarding moral fundamentalism: (1) What is it? (2) Is it really such a bad thing?
(3) Is it good for motivating public action? and (4) Are we stuck with it?
The Radford professor and past president of the Society for the Advancement of American
Philosophy is also the author of “John Dewey and Moral Imagination: Pragmatism in
Ethics” (Indiana University Press, 2003) and “Dewey” (Routledge, 2015), each of which
received “Outstanding Academic Title” awards from Choice magazine. Fesmire is also
editor of “The Oxford Handbook of Dewey” (Oxford University Press, 2019; Paperback
edition, 2023).
In 2022, Fesmire was honored with Radford's College of Humanities and Behavioral Sciences
Distinguished Scholar Award, and he was a recipient of the university’s 2022-2023
Dalton Eminent Senior Scholar Award.
Read a free chapter of “Beyond Moral Fundamentalism: Toward a Pragmatic Pluralism.”