Fellow-feeling and the moral life

Bibliographic Information

Fellow-feeling and the moral life

Joseph Duke Filonowicz

Produced by Amazon, 2014, c2008

  • : pbk.

Available at  / 1 libraries

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Note

"First published 2008. First paperback edition 2014" -- T. p. verso

Reprint. Originally published: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press , 2014

Includes bibliographical references (p. 239-245) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

How do our feelings for others shape our attitudes and conduct towards them? Is morality primarily a matter of rational choice, or instinctual feeling? Joseph Duke Filonowicz takes the reader on an engaging, informative tour of some of the main issues in philosophical ethics, explaining and defending the ideas of the early-modern British sentimentalists. These philosophers - Shaftesbury, Hutcheson, Hume, and Smith - argued that it is our feelings, and not our 'reason', which ultimately determine how we judge what is good or bad, right or wrong, and how we choose to act towards our fellow human beings. Filonowicz draws on contemporary sociology and evolutionary biology as well as present-day moral theory to examine and defend the sentimentalist view and to challenge the rationalistic character of contemporary ethics. His book will appeal to readers interested in both the history of philosophy and current ethical debates.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • 1. Fellow-feeling and ethical theory: the British sentimentalists
  • 2. Ethical sentimentalism revisited
  • 3. Shaftesbury's ethical system
  • 4. Hutcheson's moral sense
  • 5. What do we perceive by moral sense?
  • 6. C. D. Broad's defence of moral sense theories in ethics
  • 7. What is innate moral sense?

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