Richard Price and the Foundation of Virtue: Some Historical Roots of Contemporary Ethics in "A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals"
Although little known, Richard Price’s A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals (1758) is one of the most relevant texts of eighteenth-century moral philosophy. Hastings Rasdhall described it “as the best work published on Ethics till quite recent times” because it “contains the gist of the kantian doctrine without Kant's confusions”; C.D. Broad pointed out in this regard that “until Ross published his book The Right and the Good in 1930” there existed “no statement and defense of what may be called the ‘rationalistic type’ of ethical theory comparable in merit to Price’s”; and W.D. Hudson considered A Review “probably the best statement of the case for rational intuitionism which has ever been written”. In this volume Francesco Allegri demonstrates, through a rigorous analysis of the text, the full validity of previous evaluations, highlighting in particular that in A Review it is possible to find many of the traits that characterize the ethical reflection of our own times, such as the exigency to focus attention on the meaning of terms in order to clarify and resolve disputes; the identification of different levels and types of inquiry and the need to keep them distinct; the thesis that moral judgments are not definable in non-moral terms; the criticism of all forms of normative monism; the non-absolute nature of ethical principles, to be conceived as prima facie or pro tanto duties; the necessity to distinguish the moral properties of the agent from the moral properties of the action, etc. For this reason, confronting Price’s Review means going to the historical roots of contemporary ethics.
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Richard Price and the Foundation of Virtue: Some Historical Roots of Contemporary Ethics in "A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals"
Although little known, Richard Price’s A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals (1758) is one of the most relevant texts of eighteenth-century moral philosophy. Hastings Rasdhall described it “as the best work published on Ethics till quite recent times” because it “contains the gist of the kantian doctrine without Kant's confusions”; C.D. Broad pointed out in this regard that “until Ross published his book The Right and the Good in 1930” there existed “no statement and defense of what may be called the ‘rationalistic type’ of ethical theory comparable in merit to Price’s”; and W.D. Hudson considered A Review “probably the best statement of the case for rational intuitionism which has ever been written”. In this volume Francesco Allegri demonstrates, through a rigorous analysis of the text, the full validity of previous evaluations, highlighting in particular that in A Review it is possible to find many of the traits that characterize the ethical reflection of our own times, such as the exigency to focus attention on the meaning of terms in order to clarify and resolve disputes; the identification of different levels and types of inquiry and the need to keep them distinct; the thesis that moral judgments are not definable in non-moral terms; the criticism of all forms of normative monism; the non-absolute nature of ethical principles, to be conceived as prima facie or pro tanto duties; the necessity to distinguish the moral properties of the agent from the moral properties of the action, etc. For this reason, confronting Price’s Review means going to the historical roots of contemporary ethics.
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Richard Price and the Foundation of Virtue: Some Historical Roots of Contemporary Ethics in A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals

Richard Price and the Foundation of Virtue: Some Historical Roots of Contemporary Ethics in "A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals"

by Francesco Allegri
Richard Price and the Foundation of Virtue: Some Historical Roots of Contemporary Ethics in A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals

Richard Price and the Foundation of Virtue: Some Historical Roots of Contemporary Ethics in "A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals"

by Francesco Allegri

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Overview

Although little known, Richard Price’s A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals (1758) is one of the most relevant texts of eighteenth-century moral philosophy. Hastings Rasdhall described it “as the best work published on Ethics till quite recent times” because it “contains the gist of the kantian doctrine without Kant's confusions”; C.D. Broad pointed out in this regard that “until Ross published his book The Right and the Good in 1930” there existed “no statement and defense of what may be called the ‘rationalistic type’ of ethical theory comparable in merit to Price’s”; and W.D. Hudson considered A Review “probably the best statement of the case for rational intuitionism which has ever been written”. In this volume Francesco Allegri demonstrates, through a rigorous analysis of the text, the full validity of previous evaluations, highlighting in particular that in A Review it is possible to find many of the traits that characterize the ethical reflection of our own times, such as the exigency to focus attention on the meaning of terms in order to clarify and resolve disputes; the identification of different levels and types of inquiry and the need to keep them distinct; the thesis that moral judgments are not definable in non-moral terms; the criticism of all forms of normative monism; the non-absolute nature of ethical principles, to be conceived as prima facie or pro tanto duties; the necessity to distinguish the moral properties of the agent from the moral properties of the action, etc. For this reason, confronting Price’s Review means going to the historical roots of contemporary ethics.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9788869773945
Publisher: Mimesis International
Publication date: 11/30/2025
Series: Philosophy
Pages: 244
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.30(h) x (d)

About the Author

Francesco Allegi studied philosophy at the University of Florence and was awatded a doctorare in Philosophy and Human Sciences at the Roma Tre University. He currently teaches Bioethics at the Department of Medical Biotechnologies of the University of Siena (Italy), . His has published five books, focussing on the works of W. D. Ross, normative pluralism and animal ethics. His many articles have appeared in journals including Rivista di filosofia, Ragion pratica, Bioetica, Ethics and Politics and The Future of Science and Ethics. He is the Executive Editor of the international Journal Relations. Beyond Anthropocentrism and of the series IRENE (Interdisciplinary Researches on Ethics and the Natural Environment), issued by the publisher LED.
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