A generally recognized feature of morality, discovered through experience, is that it makes demands on us, requiring us to do or not do certain things. It thus seems to have authority. A distinctive feature of this kind of demand is its independence of the agent’s own ends or desires. If an authority commands you to do x, you are required to do it, end of story. A way to describe this feature is inescapability, indicating these requirements apply to you in a way you cannot escape. Another distinctive feature of morality’s demands is their weightiness. They are supposed to be such that we always have most reason to comply with them. This alleged property is the overridingness of morality. Thus, in virtue of its authority, morality is thought...
The great challenge of rhetorical argument is to make discourse ethical without making it less logic...
I reply to criticisms of the divine command theory with an eye to noting the relation of ethics to a...
In this thesis our daily held beliefs about what would be an (un)reasonable moral demand are discuss...
This paper considers Stephen Darwall’s recent attempt to overturn Elizabeth Anscombe’s claim that mo...
Is there a connection between religion and morality? Ivan Karamazov, in Dostoevsky's The Brothers Ka...
Some systems of authoritarian, Christian ethics present a very straightforward, unambiguous, concise...
I believe that it was opposition to utilitarianism which first bred arguments claiming in one way or...
The paper deals with a charge that is often made against consequentialist moral theories: that they ...
In this paper, I argue that classical theists should think of God as having created morality. In for...
From Descartes to Dostoevsky, the debate concerning the relationship between religion and morality h...
I shall develop an abductive argument for the claim that the best explanation for moral facts such a...
textPhilosophers have long thought that practical authority is morally problematic. The most familia...
If the commands of authority are peremptory and content-independent directives, it is a great puzzle...
We are subject to many different norms telling us how to act, from moral norms to etiquette rules an...
Divine law theories of metaethics claim that moral rightness is grounded in God’s commands, wishes a...
The great challenge of rhetorical argument is to make discourse ethical without making it less logic...
I reply to criticisms of the divine command theory with an eye to noting the relation of ethics to a...
In this thesis our daily held beliefs about what would be an (un)reasonable moral demand are discuss...
This paper considers Stephen Darwall’s recent attempt to overturn Elizabeth Anscombe’s claim that mo...
Is there a connection between religion and morality? Ivan Karamazov, in Dostoevsky's The Brothers Ka...
Some systems of authoritarian, Christian ethics present a very straightforward, unambiguous, concise...
I believe that it was opposition to utilitarianism which first bred arguments claiming in one way or...
The paper deals with a charge that is often made against consequentialist moral theories: that they ...
In this paper, I argue that classical theists should think of God as having created morality. In for...
From Descartes to Dostoevsky, the debate concerning the relationship between religion and morality h...
I shall develop an abductive argument for the claim that the best explanation for moral facts such a...
textPhilosophers have long thought that practical authority is morally problematic. The most familia...
If the commands of authority are peremptory and content-independent directives, it is a great puzzle...
We are subject to many different norms telling us how to act, from moral norms to etiquette rules an...
Divine law theories of metaethics claim that moral rightness is grounded in God’s commands, wishes a...
The great challenge of rhetorical argument is to make discourse ethical without making it less logic...
I reply to criticisms of the divine command theory with an eye to noting the relation of ethics to a...
In this thesis our daily held beliefs about what would be an (un)reasonable moral demand are discuss...