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Intro
Contents
About the Editor
Introduction
1 Urmson's "Saints and Heroes"
2 Deontic Logic and Its Limits
3 Duties to Act Supererogatorily?
4 Reason-Based Accounts
5 New Domains of Supererogation
6 Virtue Ethics, Feminism and Collectives
7 Religions and the Challenge of Supererogation
References
Saints and Heroes
Supererogation and Duty
1 Supererogation and Positive Duties
2 Supererogatory Acquiescence, Negative Duties, and the Trolley Problem
3 Duties that Become Supererogatory?

4 Supererogation That Becomes Dutiful and Secondary Permissibility
5 Conclusion
Supererogation, Conditional Obligation, and the All or Nothing Problem
1 Introduction
2 Optimific Altruism
3 Conditional Obligation
4 Summary
References
Latitude, Supererogation, and Imperfect Duties
1 Introduction
2 A Broadly Kantian Account of the Distinction Between Perfect and Imperfect Duties
3 Supererogation and Going Above and Beyond the Call of Imperfect Duty
4 Do Imperfect Duties Provide Us with the Right Amount of Latitude?
5 Conclusion
References

The Staircase Scene: Supererogation and Moral Attunement
1 The Puzzle
2 Supererogation and Moral Requirement
3 Indignation and Collective Obligations
4 Two Moralities
5 What Is Duty?
6 Supererogatory Moral Salience
6.1 Attunement, Salience, and the Upright Agent
6.2 Going Beyond Upright Attunement
7 Objections
7.1 Indignation not Appropriate
7.2 Is This Really Supererogation?
8 Conclusion
References
Must Virtue Be Heroic? Virtue Ethics and the Possibility of Supererogation
1 Introduction
2 Hursthouse's Revisionary Account of Supererogation

3 Annas's Rejection of Supererogation
4 Conclusion
References
The Expected, the Contra-Expected, the Supererogatory, and the Suberogatory
1 Introduction
2 The Expected and the Contra-Expected
3 The Supererogatory and the Suberogatory
4 The Moral-Normative Rationale for the Morally Expected and the Morally Contra-Expected
5 The Deontic Asymmetry of the Supererogatory and the Suberogatory
6 Conclusion
References
Supererogation and Its Conceptual Neighborhood Through a DWE Lens
1 Introduction
2 DWE and Logical Features of Supererogation and Affiliated Concepts

2.1 The Traditional Deontic Scheme
2.2 The Traditional Scheme, Supererogation, Indifference, and Urmson's Constraint
2.3 Additional Concepts in the Neighborhood and Logical Connections
2.4 The DWE Framework
3 Adding an Aretaic Module: Agent Evaluation, Supererogation, and Suberogation
3.1 A Framework for Agent-Evaluative Appraisal
3.2 Integrating DWE's More Act-Evaluative Notions with AA's Agent-Evaluative Notions
4 Digging a Bit Deeper and Wrapping Up
4.1 Interlude: Revisiting the DWE Structures
4.2 Some Brief Additional Reflections and Conclusion
References

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