Hume's Moral TheoryRoutledge, 2003 M09 2 - 176 páginas First Published in 1980. This volume looks at Hume's moral theory as a relatively neglected area of Hume's philosophy and Law. It explores Hume's account of what he called article virtues and his anticipations of utilitarianism. |
Contenido
Humes Psychology of Action Treatise II iii | |
Morality not based on Reason Treatise III i | |
Variants of Sentimentalism Treatise III i | |
The Artificial Virtues 1 Justice and Property Treatise III ii 14 | |
The Obligation of Promises Treatise III ii | |
The Artificiality of Justice Treatise III ii | |
The Origin of Government and the Limits of Political Obligation | |
ii 710 | |
Smith Price Reid | |
Conclusions | |
Notes | |
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Términos y frases comunes
advantage affections agent agreement approve argues argument artificial virtues behaviour belief beneficial benevolence Butler categorical imperatives claim Clarke Clarke’s cognitivist conclusion conflict conscience convention derived descriptivism desire disapprove dispositions duty emotivist Enquiry Epistemology example explained explicitly express fact favour feelings give happiness Hobbes Hobbes’s honesty human nature Hume says Hume thinks Hutcheson hypothetical imperatives ideas impartial instinctive interest interpersonal intuitionism kind laws means moral distinctions moral judgments moral objectivism moral sense moral sentiments moral statements motive natural features natural virtues objectification objective moral objectivist obligation one’s ordinary particular passions person practice premiss prescriptive prescriptivist Price principle produce promise-keeping promises question rational regard Reid relations Richard Price right and wrong rules of justice self-interest self-love selfish Shaftesbury Simon Blackburn society someone sort suggestion supervenience supposed sympathy tend tendency thesis things Treatise truth universal prescriptivism utilitarian variant of sentimentalism vice virtuous whole Wollaston