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Principia Ethica

Chapter 9: INDEX.
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About This Book

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.

INDEX.

  • Feeling
    • supposed analogy to cognition 129-31, 141
    • supposed bearing on Ethics 129-31, 141
  • Fiction 121-2
  • Freedom, value of 86, 186
  • Freedom (of Will) 127
  • Kant 110, 129
    • ‘Copernican revolution’ 133
    • value of Good Will 174-5, 179 n. 2, 180
    • value of Happiness 174-5
    • theory of judgment 125
    • ‘Kingdom of Ends’ 113
    • ‘practical love’ 179
    • connection of ‘goodness’ with ‘will’ 126-8
  • Knowledge