The authors believe that just as it is unethical for physicians to refuse to treat patients who do not seem to understand or cooperate with what they are told about what they cannot do and what they must do to stay healthy, it is unethical for moral teachers to stop trying to educate people who sincerely see no other solutions for their problems than ways plausibly promoted in their secular milieu but which are in fact morally harmful.
The authors believe that just as it is unethical for physicians to refuse to treat patients who do not seem to understand or cooperate with what they are told about what they cannot do and what they must do to stay healthy, it is unethical for moral teachers to stop trying to educate people who sincerely see no other solutions for their problems than ways plausibly promoted in their secular milieu but which are in fact morally harmful.
See p. 311.
The authors believe that just as it is unethical for physicians to refuse to treat patients who do not seem to understand or cooperate with what they are told about what they cannot do and what they must do to stay healthy, it is unethical for moral teachers to stop trying to educate people who sincerely see no other solutions for their problems than ways plausibly promoted in their secular milieu but which are in fact morally harmful.
See p. 311.