Ought, Reasons, and Morality: The Collected Papers of W.D. Falk |
Common terms and phrases
action action-guiding attitudes Bishop Butler called cause choice claim cognitive concept concern count depends desire direct pleading dispositions distinction duty effect emotivist entail ethical evocative fact favor feature feel further G. E. Moore give goading grounds guidance by reason guiding H. A. Prichard H. L. A. Hart Hegel human Hume Hume's ibid imperative mood implications Inquiry interest intrinsic judge judgment of merit Kant knowledge known Kurt Baier language logical matter means merit judgment mild mind Moore moral commitment moral skepticism motive natural properties naturalistic fallacy necessarily object obligation one's oneself ordinary ought-judgments passions person persuasive precepts prescriptive Prichard principle problem prudence psychological purely question R. M. Hare rational methods reflective relevant role Rousseau rule seek seems sense sentiment simply social Social Contract someone statement sufficient telling things thought truth ultimate understanding W. D. Ross