Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics: A Guide
Henry Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics has been a central part of the utilitarian canon since its publication in 1874. This book, part of the Oxford Guides to Philosophy series, is a concise companion to Sidgwick's masterpiece, written primarily to aid advanced undergraduate students and interested general readers in navigating and interpreting the original text. Author David Phillips connects Sidgwick's work to work in contemporary moral philosophy and in the history of moral philosophy, paying particular attention to his relationships with key predecessors, including Kant and Mill, and with Moore and Ross, his most influential successors in the British intuitionist tradition. The book's first eight chapters end with brief suggestions for further reading. At the end of the final three chapters there are more substantial overviews of the secondary literature on the aspects of Sidgwick's work that have generated the most interest among his commentators: metaethics and moral epistemology; consequentialism versus deontology; and egoism and the dualism of practical reason. The result is an Oxford Guide that will be a helpful resource for both students and scholars.
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Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics: A Guide
Henry Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics has been a central part of the utilitarian canon since its publication in 1874. This book, part of the Oxford Guides to Philosophy series, is a concise companion to Sidgwick's masterpiece, written primarily to aid advanced undergraduate students and interested general readers in navigating and interpreting the original text. Author David Phillips connects Sidgwick's work to work in contemporary moral philosophy and in the history of moral philosophy, paying particular attention to his relationships with key predecessors, including Kant and Mill, and with Moore and Ross, his most influential successors in the British intuitionist tradition. The book's first eight chapters end with brief suggestions for further reading. At the end of the final three chapters there are more substantial overviews of the secondary literature on the aspects of Sidgwick's work that have generated the most interest among his commentators: metaethics and moral epistemology; consequentialism versus deontology; and egoism and the dualism of practical reason. The result is an Oxford Guide that will be a helpful resource for both students and scholars.
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Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics: A Guide

Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics: A Guide

by David Phillips
Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics: A Guide

Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics: A Guide

by David Phillips

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$21.69 

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Overview

Henry Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics has been a central part of the utilitarian canon since its publication in 1874. This book, part of the Oxford Guides to Philosophy series, is a concise companion to Sidgwick's masterpiece, written primarily to aid advanced undergraduate students and interested general readers in navigating and interpreting the original text. Author David Phillips connects Sidgwick's work to work in contemporary moral philosophy and in the history of moral philosophy, paying particular attention to his relationships with key predecessors, including Kant and Mill, and with Moore and Ross, his most influential successors in the British intuitionist tradition. The book's first eight chapters end with brief suggestions for further reading. At the end of the final three chapters there are more substantial overviews of the secondary literature on the aspects of Sidgwick's work that have generated the most interest among his commentators: metaethics and moral epistemology; consequentialism versus deontology; and egoism and the dualism of practical reason. The result is an Oxford Guide that will be a helpful resource for both students and scholars.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780197539644
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 04/22/2022
Series: Oxford Guides to Philosophy
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

David Phillips is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Houston. His research interests are in ethics and the history of ethics with a particular focus on British moral philosophers. He is the author of Sidgwickian Ethics (OUP, 2011) and of Rossian Ethics: W.D. Ross and Contemporary Moral Theory (OUP, 2019).

Table of Contents

Chapter One: Introduction (Methods Prefaces) Chapter Two: Sidgwick's Project and the Three Methods (Methods I.I and I.VI) Chapter Three: Meaning, Motivation, and Free Will (Methods I.III, I.IV, and I.V) Chapter Four: Intuitionism and Goodness (Methods I.VIII and I.IX) Chapter Five: The Method of Egoism (Methods I.VII and Book II) Chapter Six: The Critique of Common-Sense Morality (Methods III.I-III.XI) Chapter Seven: Philosophical Intuitionism (Methods III.XIII) Chapter Eight: Hedonism (Methods III.XIV) Chapter Nine: Utilitarianism: Meaning and Proof (Methods IV.I and IV.II) Chapter Ten: Utilitarianism and Common-Sense Morality (Methods IV.III, IV.IV, and IV.V) Chapter Eleven: The Dualism of Practical Reason (Methods Concluding Chapter)
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