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Understanding Others

by
September 2002, no. 244

Ethical Encounter: The Depth of Moral Meaning by Christopher Cordner

Palgrave, $148.50 hb, 216 pp

Understanding Others

by
September 2002, no. 244

Moral philosophy is often disappointing to those who, unaware of the nature of the subject, look there for insight into the human condition. One reason for this is that, ever since Aristotle rejected Socrates’ strange identification of knowledge and virtue, and insisted that the moral consists of doing rather than knowing (or, in the language of the profession, of practical rather than pure reason), astonishingly few philosophers have reconsidered the extent to which moral questions may be questions of understanding. But, without some such notion, morality will not have depth and nor, therefore, will the moral philosophy that purports to elucidate it.

Ethical Encounter: The Depth of Moral Meaning

Ethical Encounter: The Depth of Moral Meaning

by Christopher Cordner

Palgrave, $148.50 hb, 216 pp

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