A vindication of moral law as the foundation of ethics
Any enquiry into Ethics must presuppose at least three very important and possibly awkward assumptions, awkward from the point of view of the methodological and even metaphysical problems raised. It must presuppose that it enquires into something, that what it enquires into has a certain definite an...
Main Author: | Haezrahi-Brisker, Pepita |
---|---|
Published: |
Royal Holloway, University of London
1951
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.703688 |
Similar Items
-
Evolutionary ethics without the error : how care ethics can vindicate moral realism
by: Walsh, Joseph Paul
Published: (2013) -
The validation of moral statements
by: Baier, Kurt
Published: (1952) -
Meaning and criteria in moral philosophy : (an examination of the concept of relevant reasons in moral thinking)
by: MacNiven, Don
Published: (1967) -
In defence of moral error theory and moral abolitionism
by: Dimmock, Mark
Published: (2016) -
Morality, dignity and pragmatism : an essay on the future of morality
by: Wilson, James George Scott
Published: (2002)