David Gauthier


David Gauthier is a Canadian-American philosopher best known for his neo-Hobbesian social contract theory of morality, as developed in his 1986 book Morals by Agreement.

Life and career

Gauthier was born in Toronto in 1932 and educated at the University of Toronto, Harvard University, and the University of Oxford.
He taught at the University of Toronto from 1958 until 1980, when he joined the Department of Philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh, where he is now Distinguished Service Professor emeritus.
Gauthier has also held visiting appointments at UCLA, UC Berkeley, Princeton, UC Irvine, and the University of Waterloo.
In 1979, he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.

Philosophy

Gauthier is the author of numerous articles, some of the most important of which are collected in Moral Dealing, as well as several books including Practical Reasoning, The Logic of Leviathan, Morals by Agreement, and Rousseau: The Sentiment of Existence.
In addition to systematic work in moral theory, Gauthier is also interested in the history of political philosophy, especially Hobbes and Rousseau. He has also done work on the theory of practical rationality, where he begins from an attempt to understand economic rationality, rather than from Kantian or Aristotelian antecedents.
Gauthier understands value as a matter of individuals' subjective preferences, and argues that moral constraints on straightforward utility-maximizing are prudentially justified. He argues that it is most prudent to give up straightforward maximizing and instead adopt a disposition of constrained maximization, according to which one resolves to cooperate with all similarly disposed persons and defect on the rest, since repeated cooperation provides greater yields than repeated mutual defection from contracts. According to Gauthier's contractarian ethics, moral constraints are justified because they make us all better off, in terms of our preferences. A consequence is that good moral thinking is just an elevated and subtly strategic version of means–end reasoning.