Ethical intuitionists believe that there is an irreducible plurality of basic moral principles, that these principles are self-evident, and that rightness and goodness are indefinable properties that cannot be understood in wholly naturalistic terms. In this collection, leading moral philosophers consider how these views are to be understood, and what implications they have for our understanding of morality.
Ethical intuitionists believe that there is an irreducible plurality of basic moral principles, that these principles are self-evident, and that rightness and goodness are indefinable properties that cannot be understood in wholly naturalistic terms. In this collection, leading moral philosophers consider how these views are to be understood, and what implications they have for our understanding of morality.
Philip Stratton-Lake is Lecturer in Philosophy at Reading University.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1: Robert Audi: Prospects for a Value-Based Intuitionism 2: Roger Crisp: Sidgwick and Intuitionism 3: David McNaughton: An Unconnected Heap of Duties? 4: Tom Baldwin: The Three Phases of Intuitionism 5: Philip Stratton-Lake: Pleasure and Reflection in Ross 6: Berys Gaut: Justifying Moral Pluralism 7: Brad Hooker: Intuitions and Moral Theorizing 8: Nicholas Sturgeon: Ethical Intuitionism, Ethical Naturalism 9: Allan Gibbard: Knowing What to Do, Seeing What to Do 10: Jonathan Dancy: Prichard on Duty and Ignorance of Fact 11: Stephen Darwall: Intuitionism and the Motivation Problem 12: Robert Arrington: A Wittgensteinian Approach Bibliography, Index
Introduction 1: Robert Audi: Prospects for a Value-Based Intuitionism 2: Roger Crisp: Sidgwick and Intuitionism 3: David McNaughton: An Unconnected Heap of Duties? 4: Tom Baldwin: The Three Phases of Intuitionism 5: Philip Stratton-Lake: Pleasure and Reflection in Ross 6: Berys Gaut: Justifying Moral Pluralism 7: Brad Hooker: Intuitions and Moral Theorizing 8: Nicholas Sturgeon: Ethical Intuitionism, Ethical Naturalism 9: Allan Gibbard: Knowing What to Do, Seeing What to Do 10: Jonathan Dancy: Prichard on Duty and Ignorance of Fact 11: Stephen Darwall: Intuitionism and the Motivation Problem 12: Robert Arrington: A Wittgensteinian Approach Bibliography, Index
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