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Principia Ethica

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The work analyzes ethical inquiry by distinguishing two questions: what things have intrinsic value and what actions ought to be performed. It contends that good names a simple, indefinable quality and cautions against defining it in natural terms, a point associated with the naturalistic fallacy and the open-question argument. Claims about right action are shown to require both factual, causal information about consequences and self-evident ethical propositions. The author argues that many kinds of things are intrinsically good and that wholes can possess value not reducible to their parts, a principle termed organic unities, and develops an ideal-consequentialist framework for moral judgment.

About the Author

Moore, G. E. portrait

G. E. Moore

G. E. Moore was a prominent British philosopher known for his significant contributions to ethics and epistemology. He is best recognized for his works "Principia Ethica," where he introduced the concept of the 'naturalistic fallacy,' and "Philosophical Studies," which explored various philosophical issues. Moore's analytical approach and emphasis on clarity and precision in philosophical argumentation have had a lasting influence on modern philosophy, particularly in the development of ethical theory and the philosophy of language. His work laid the groundwork for later philosophical movements, including analytic philosophy.

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