“Part of the Very Concept”: Wittgensteinian Moral Philosophy1

Philosophical Investigations 36 (1):37-55 (2012)
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Abstract

X is “part of the very concept” of Y. This formulation recurs throughout Raimond Gaita's philosophy and informs Christopher Cordner's. I elucidate the formulation's meaning and the nature of the necessity posited, then conclude with a criticism. One cannot love evil. One cannot love cow dung. For Gaita, these claims differ in type. The first testifies to a conceptual relation, but the second to a “mere fact.” I see no clear basis for assigning to claims one type over another, which challenges the footing of Wittgensteinian moral philosophy. Why do no moral“mere facts” partly define our form of life?

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References found in this work

Rules: Looking in the right place.Cora Diamond - 1989 - In Dayton Z. Phillips & Peter G. Winch (eds.), Wittgenstein.
Foucault and ethical universality.Christopher Cordner - 2004 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 47 (6):580 – 596.
Life and death matters: Losing a sense of the value of human beings.Christopher Cordner - 2005 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 26 (3):207-226.

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