Description
DESCRIPTION FOR BOYS (ages 10-16):
Every other book in this series told you what a good man looks like. This one asks a harder question. Why be good at all?
Not because it pays. Not because people will like you. Not because you’ll feel better. Because it’s right. That’s it. That’s the whole reason. And if that reason isn’t enough, Immanuel Kant would tell you that everything you built with the other fourteen books is standing on sand.
Do the Right Thing takes Kant’s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals, the densest and most rigorous moral philosophy ever written, and makes it land for a young man who’s never read a word of philosophy. No German jargon. No academic fog. Just the hardest questions about right and wrong you’ll ever face, answered with a logic that nobody has been able to knock down in over two hundred years.
How to test whether any action is right or wrong in thirty seconds. Why using people, even people who don’t seem to mind, is the deepest moral failure there is. Why doing the right thing only counts when you don’t feel like doing it. Why the moment nobody is watching is the moment that defines your character. Why every person you meet, every single one, has a worth that’s beyond any price.
Every chapter ends with a PUT IT TO WORK section. Not a lecture. A test you can run on your own life this week.
Kant never raised his voice. He never needed to. The argument does the work.
DESCRIPTION FOR PARENTS / GIFT BUYERS:
Your son already knows what a good man looks like. This series has spent fourteen books showing him. What he might not know yet is why being good matters when nobody is watching, when it costs something, when doing wrong would be easier and more profitable.
Do the Right Thing answers that question with the most rigorous moral argument ever constructed.
Immanuel Kant’s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals is the foundation of modern ethical philosophy. It is also, in its original form, nearly unreadable for anyone without a philosophy degree. This book translates Kant’s core ideas into language a 10 to 16-year-old boy can absorb and use.
The categorical imperative: a universal test for right and wrong that works in any situation. The duty-based ethic: why doing right because it’s right is stronger than doing right because it pays. The humanity principle: why every person, without exception, deserves to be treated as a person, not a tool. The shopkeeper problem: the difference between good behavior and good character.
Every chapter ends with a concrete exercise that puts Kant’s philosophy to work in a teenager’s actual life. This is not abstract. It is the most practical moral framework your son will ever encounter, because it works without depending on feelings, rewards, or circumstances.
If you want your son to have a moral foundation that doesn’t crack under pressure, that doesn’t disappear when the incentives change, that holds whether anyone is watching or not, Kant built it. This book puts it in his hands.


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