Revue Internationale de Philosophie

Year:

Volume: 2013, Issue: no. 263
  1. Elizabeth S. Radcliffe, Moral Sentimentalism and the Reasonableness of Being Good.
    In this paper, I discuss the implications of Hutcheson’s and Hume’s sentimentalist theories for the question of whether and how we can offer reasons to be moral. Hutcheson and Hume agree that reason does not give us ultimate ends. Because of this, on Hutcheson’s line, the possession of affections and of a moral sense makes practical reasons possible. On Hume’s view, that reason does not give us ultimate ends means that reason does not motivate on its own, and this makes (...)
     
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