On What Matters

豆瓣
On What Matters

登录后可管理标记收藏。

ISBN: 9780198778608
作者: Derek Parfit
publishing house: Oxford University Press
发行时间: 2016 -11
装订: Hardcover
价格: USD 45.00
页数: 360

/ 10

0 个评分

评分人数不足
借阅或购买

Volume Three

Derek Parfit   

简介

Derek Parfit presents the third volume of On What Matters, his landmark work of moral philosophy. Parfit develops further his influential treatment of reasons, normativity, the meaning of moral discourse, and the status of morality. He engages with his critics, and shows the way to resolution of their differences. This volume is partly about what it is for things to matter, in the sense that we all have reasons to care about these things. Much of the book discusses three of the main kinds of meta-ethical theory: Normative Naturalism, Quasi-Realist Expressivism, and Non-Metaphysical Non-Naturalism, which Derek Parfit now calls Non-Realist Cognitivism. This third theory claims that, if we use the word 'reality' in an ontologically weighty sense, irreducibly normative truths have no mysterious or incredible ontological implications. If instead we use 'reality' in a wide sense, according to which all truths are truths about reality, this theory claims that some non-empirically discoverable truths-such as logical, mathematical, modal, and some normative truths-raise no difficult ontological questions. Parfit discusses these theories partly by commenting on the views of some of the contributors to Peter Singer's collection Does Anything Really Matter? Parfit on Objectivity. Though Peter Railton is a Naturalist, he has widened his view by accepting some further claims, and he has suggested that this wider version of Naturalism could be combined with Non-Realist Cognitivism. Parfit argues that Railton is right, since these theories no longer deeply disagree. Though Allan Gibbard is a Quasi-Realist Expressivist, he has suggested that the best version of his view could be combined with Non-Realist Cognitivism. Parfit argues that Gibbard is right, since Gibbard and he now accept the other's main meta-ethical claim. It is rare for three such different philosophical theories to be able to be widened in ways that resolve their deepest disagreements. This happy convergence supports the view that these meta-ethical theories are true. Parfit also discusses the views of several other philosophers, and some other meta-ethical and normative questions.

目录

Preface
Summary
Part Seven: Irreducibly Normative Truths
37: How Things Might Matter
38: Normative and Natural Truths
39: Gibbard's Offer to Non-Naturalists
40: Railton's Defence of Soft Naturalism
41: Railton's Resolution of our Disagreements
42: Jackson's Non-Empirical Normative Truths
43: Schroeder's Conservative Reductive Thesis
Part Eight: Expressivist Truths
44: Quasi-Realist Expressivism
45: Gibbard's Resolution of our Disagreements
46: Another Triple Theory
Part Nine: Normative and Psychological Reasons
47: Expressivist Reasons
48: Subjectivist Reasons
49: Street's Meta-Ethical Constructivism
50: Morality, Blame, and Internal Reasons
51: Nietzsche's Mountain
52: What Matters and Universal Reasons
53: Act Consequentialism, Reasons, and Morality

短评
评论
笔记