Intuitions and the Value of a Person

Journal of Applied Philosophy 14 (1):83-86 (1997)
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Abstract

In contemporary moral theory and normative ethics there is frequent recourse to ‘intuitions’ of value. One current instance of this is the appeal in reproductive and population ethics to the thought that the existence of a human being is not as such good or bad. Here the status and substance of this assumption are challenged. In addition, doubt is cast on the value of appeals to intuition where these are not related to some philosophical account of the grounds of value.

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John Joseph Haldane
University of London

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