About the journal

Cobiss

Filozofija i drustvo 2004 Issue 25, Pages: 113-173
https://doi.org/10.2298/FID0525113D
Full text ( 253 KB)
Cited by


From universal prescriptive to Kantian utilitarianism

Dobrijević Aleksandar T. (Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju, Beograd)

The author re-examines Hare's multiple ways of connecting his metaethical with his normative doctrine, which is in formal sense determined as "Kantian utilitarianism", and in substantive sense as "preference-utilitarianism". Critical references to both dimensions of utilitarian doctrine aim at indication on scopes and limits of Hare's ambitious redefinition of the doctrine. Further on he discusses about so-called "necessary ingredient" of moral reasoning under the name of "sympathetic imagination", which Hare grasps in his developed theory not only as a normative demand but also as a logical thesis. Finally, he considers kinds of preferences that can or cannot be recognized (with help of established set of criteria) as morally relevant.

Keywords: universal prescriptive, prudential and moral thinking, preferences, desires, interests, ideals, utilitarianism, preference-utilitarianism, Kantian utilitarianism, sympathetic imagination, principle of conditional reflection