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The Birth of Ethics: Reconstructing the Role and Nature of Morality

Autor Philip Pettit / Kinch Hoekstra

Editorial OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

The Birth of Ethics: Reconstructing the Role and Nature of Morality
35,99€
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  • Editorial OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780190904913
  • ISBN10 0190904917
  • Tipo LIBRO
  • Páginas 400
  • Colección The Berkeley Tanner Lectures #
  • Año de Edición 2018
  • Idioma Inglés
  • Encuadernación Tapa dura

The Birth of Ethics: Reconstructing the Role and Nature of Morality

Autor Philip Pettit / Kinch Hoekstra

Editorial OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

35,99€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

Imagine a human society, perhaps in pre-history, in which people were generally of a psychological kind with us, had the use of natural language to communicate with one another, but did not have any properly moral concepts in which to exhort one another to meet certain standards and to lodge related claims and complaints. According to The Birth of Ethics, the members of that society would have faced a set of pressures, and made a series of adjustments in response, sufficient to put them within reach of ethical concepts. Without any planning, they would have more or less inevitably evolved a way of using such concepts to articulate desirable patterns of behavior and to hold themselves and one another responsible to those standards. Sooner or later, they would have entered ethical space.

While this central claim is developed as a thesis in conjectural history or genealogy, the aim of the exercise is philosophical. Assuming that it explains the emergence of concepts and practices that are more or less equivalent to ours, the story offers us an account of the nature and role of morality. It directs us to the function that ethics plays in human life and alerts us to the character in virtue of which it can serve that function. The emerging view of morality has implications for the standard range of questions in meta-ethics and moral psychology, and enables us to understand why there are divisions in normative ethics like that between consequentialist and Kantian approaches.

Philip Pettit is Laurence Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values at Princeton University. He is also Professor of Philosophy at the Australian National University. Kinch Hoekstra is Chancellor's Professor of Political Science and Law at University of California, Berkeley.