About This Book
The work proposes a scientific foundation for moral rules by treating ethics as principles derived from the nature and conditions of human life and social organization. It argues that moral codes should promote social welfare and individual well-being, explains how obligations, rights, justice, and sympathy can be grounded in observable consequences and evolutionary development, criticizes ascetic and supernatural prescriptions as impractical, and outlines how a naturalistic morality can be formulated and applied to personal and political conduct.
About the Author
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