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In the diverse but related essays collected in Values and Evaluations, Julius Kovesi's central concerns are the nature of ideological thinking and the rational core of morality. "It is characteristic of ideological beliefs that their truth is upheld independent of the arguments for them," he contends. He examines ideological tendencies in the Marxist tradition, in attempts to demythologize Christianity, and in modern British ethical theory. In ethics, he continues the attack on the fact/value dichotomy he began in Moral Notions, a dichotomy he thinks has ideological sources. In theology, he…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In the diverse but related essays collected in Values and Evaluations, Julius Kovesi's central concerns are the nature of ideological thinking and the rational core of morality. "It is characteristic of ideological beliefs that their truth is upheld independent of the arguments for them," he contends. He examines ideological tendencies in the Marxist tradition, in attempts to demythologize Christianity, and in modern British ethical theory. In ethics, he continues the attack on the fact/value dichotomy he began in Moral Notions, a dichotomy he thinks has ideological sources. In theology, he argues that demythologizing is really a form of "remythologizing." A long study of Moses Hess's essay On the Essence of Money is used to illuminate the early thought of Marx.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Julius Kovesi grew up in prewar Hungary but left in 1949, later settling in Perth, Western Australia. He studied philosophy at Budapest University, at the University of Western Australia, and at Oxford, where he coedited Why?, a journal of philosophical parody. He made his name in philosophy in 1967 with Moral Notions, a lively attack on the then widely accepted dichotomy between «fact» and «value.» Apart from moral philosophy, his intellectual interests included Marxism, theology, and Plato. Most of his career was spent at the University of Western Australia. The author died in 1989.
The Editor: Alan Tapper teaches Philosophy at Edith Cowan University in Perth, Western Australia. His research interests include eighteenth-century-intellectual history and contemporary social issues. He is author of The Family in the Welfare State, a study of Australian family policy.