Two Sources of Morality

Social Philosophy and Policy 18 (2):102 (2001)
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Abstract

This essay emerges from consideration of a question in the epistemology of ethics or morality. This is not the common claim-centered question as to how moral claims are confirmed and whether their mode of confirmation gives us grounds to be confident about the prospects for ethical discourse. Instead, I am concerned with the less frequently posed concept-centered question of where in human experience moral terms or concepts are grounded — that is, where in experience the moral becomes salient to us. This question was central to moral epistemology in the form it took among thinkers such as Locke, Hume, and Kant, and it remains of the first importance today

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Philip Pettit
Australian National University

Citations of this work

Programming collective control.Kenneth Shockley - 2007 - Journal of Social Philosophy 38 (3):442–455.
Salience Reasoning.Gerald J. Postema - 2008 - Topoi 27 (1-2):41-55.
The Robust Demands of the Right.Dorothea Gädeke - 2018 - Moral Philosophy and Politics 5 (1):29-47.

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References found in this work

What we owe to each other.Thomas Scanlon - 1998 - Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
A Treatise of Human Nature.David Hume & A. D. Lindsay - 1958 - Philosophical Quarterly 8 (33):379-380.
Making it Explicit.Isaac Levi & Robert B. Brandom - 1996 - Journal of Philosophy 93 (3):145.
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding.John Locke - 1979 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 169 (2):221-222.
Intention.P. L. Heath - 1960 - Philosophical Quarterly 10 (40):281.

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