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Having it both ways: hybrid theories and modern metaethics

Autor Guy Fletcher

Editorial OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Having it both ways: hybrid theories and modern metaethics
63,00€
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The variety, breadth, and depth of these essays make the collection well worth exploring. Metaethics has always drawn from other areas of philosophy to make progress, and in this volume you can see that in spades. The emphasis is in using recent d...

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  • Editorial OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780199347582
  • ISBN10 0199347581
  • Tipo LIBRO
  • Año de Edición 2016
  • Idioma Inglés
  • Encuadernación Tela

Having it both ways: hybrid theories and modern metaethics

Autor Guy Fletcher

Editorial OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

The variety, breadth, and depth of these essays make the collection well worth exploring. Metaethics has always drawn from other areas of philosophy to make progress, and in this volume you can see that in spades. The emphasis is in using recent d...

63,00€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

The variety, breadth, and depth of these essays make the collection well worth exploring. Metaethics has always drawn from other areas of philosophy to make progress, and in this volume you can see that in spades. The emphasis is in using recent developments in the philosophy of language and mind to open the door to new ways of conceiving of moral discourse. It would be unreasonable to expect to find any finished hybrid theories here, as the contributors are still working out the details, but it would be even more unreasonable to ignore the progress being made. (Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Online)











A recent trend in metaethics has been to reject the apparent choice between pure cognitivism, where moral (and other normative) judgments are understood as representational or belief-like states, and pure non-cognitivism, where they are understood as non-representational or desire-like states. Rather, philosophers have adopted views which seek in some way to combine the strengths of each side while avoiding the standard problems for each. Some such views claim that moral judgments are complexes of belief-like and desire-like components. Other views claim that normative language serves both to ascribe properties and to express desire-like attitudes. This collection of twelve new essays examines the prospects for such 'hybrid views' of normative thought and language. The papers, which focus mainly on moral thought and talk, provide a guide to this debate while also pushing it forward along numerous fronts.











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