Impartiality and Consistency

Philosophy 36 (137):161 - 176 (1961)
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Abstract

It is quite commonly held nowadays that universalizability is a purely formal feature of moral terms, or perhaps of moral rules.To say that something is good, it is asserted, implies that anything else with the same characteristics is also good; to say that Jones ought to do X is to commit oneself to saying that, in the same circumstances, Smith ought to do X. In pointing this out, it is suggested, one is not oneself taking up a moral position, or laying down a particular moral rule, but simply making it clear what a moral utterance is. The principle ofuniversalizability is thus a principle of meta-ethics, not of morality itself. That moral judgments are universalizable, Hare tells us, is an analytic statement: “analytic by virtue of the meaning of the word moral”

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Ultimate principles and ethical egoism.Brian Medlin - 1957 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 35 (2):111 – 118.
Foundations of morality.J. Kemp - 1957 - Philosophical Quarterly 7 (29):305-318.

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