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Moral Obligations Thomas E. Wren

Moral Obligations By Thomas E. Wren

Moral Obligations by Thomas E. Wren


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Summary

There are many ways of writing about the moral life; Moral Obligations follows the way of what philosophers call ""meta-ethics"": the analysis, not of particular moral problems, but of how the concepts used in formulating and solving them, concepts like ""right"" and ""obligatory,"" have significance and power over us

Moral Obligations Summary

Moral Obligations: Action, Intention, and Valuation by Thomas E. Wren

There are many ways of writing about the moral life; Moral Obligations follows the way of what philosophers call ""meta-ethics"": the analysis, not of particular moral problems, but of how the concepts used in formulating and solving them, concepts like ""right"" and ""obligatory,"" have significance and power over us. The meta-ethical part of this book is preceded by a discussion of action, in which Wren lays the foundations for the argument that moral obligation is a part of the formal structure of human agency.

Wren's argument is practical and social-psychological: it is to help all, starting with those who are already committed to some version of the ethic of individual dignity, to promote interagency fellowship and peace as a result of seeing a certain truth, namely, the truth that the urgency of their feelings of moral obligation derives from a unspoken intention to belong to a community of agents.

Moral Obligations begins with the philosophy of action, and then it reviews the historical debate about the nature of obligation and its social context. This is followed by a section about action in general: it establishes the standpoint of the agent and makes an inventory of several species of action. Later chapters summarize the foregoing themes, with emphasis on the unspoken side of intention, and develop them in conjunction with an analysis of the hypothetical imperative. The work closes with a discussion of the dilemma of membership in competing moral communities.

About Thomas E. Wren

Thomas E. Wren is professor of philosophy and assistant chair of the department at Loyola University, Chicago. He is the author or editor of multiple books including Caring About Morality, The Moral Domain, and The Personal Universe.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction to the Transaction Edition CHAPTER 1. ACTION 1. The Standpoint of the Agent 2. The Primacy of Action 3. Self and Other 4. A Taxonomy of Action 5. Transitive, Intransitive, and Static Actions CHAPTER 2. INTENTION 1. The Descriptions of an Action 2. Levels of Intention 3. The Tacit Side of Intention 4. The Vertical, Forward, and Lateral Dimensions CHAPTER 3. VALUATION 1. The Greek Debate 2. Medieval Conceptions of Value 3. The Naturalistic Fallacy 4. Prescriptivism 5. Descriptivism CHAPTER 4. OBLIGATION 1. Three Preparatory Distinctions 2. Moral Urgency and Other Oughts 3. Why Be Moral? 4. The Necessity of Interagency CHAPTER 5: THE MORAL COMMUNITY 1. The Rightness of Rules 2. Self-Imposed Heteronomy 3. Three Conceptions of Harmony CHAPTER 6: THE MORAL DOMAIN 1. The Model 2. Applied Geometry 3. Some Ongoing Discussions of Moral Agency INDEX

Additional information

NPB9781412813402
9781412813402
1412813409
Moral Obligations: Action, Intention, and Valuation by Thomas E. Wren
New
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Inc
2010-06-30
150
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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