Anyone familiar with Richard Kraut's work in ancient philosophy will be excited to see him putting aside the dusty tomes of the ancients and delving into ethics first-hand. He does not disappoint. His book is a lucid and wide-ranging discussion that provides at least the core of an ethical theory and an appealing set of answers to a range of ethical questions.Kraut aims to provide an alternative to utilitarianism that preserves the good-centred nature of that theory. He claims that all justification ‘proceeds by way of good and bad’ and that the only way for something to be good or bad is for it to be good or bad for some living thing. He is adamant that this does not commit him to utilitarianism, nor to downplaying considerations such as p...
Contemporary critics of egoism theories take on easy targets when they show (a) that they are not re...
Burtchaell provides a clear, engagingly written, thoughtful, and impassioned discussion of developme...
What is at stake in determining how to translate the central term of Greek ethical philosophy, that ...
Anyone familiar with Richard Kraut's work in ancient philosophy will be excited to see him putting a...
An authority on the moral philosophy of Plato and Aristotle, Kraut (Northwestern) offers an original...
No Abs Richard Kraut’s What is Good and Why is a development and defense of devel-opmentalism. But K...
This volume is a collection of eleven essays by Mark Schroeder, including one previously unpublished...
Erik Wielenberg’s new book Robust Ethics: The Metaphysics and Epistemology of Godless Normative Real...
How to be Good is an accessible, engagingly written primer on moral philosophy and practice. The boo...
General Ethics develops a metaethical, sociological, and historical interpretive approach to ethics ...
Introducing Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics to undergraduates, which is the explicit goal of Michael ...
In this book review I argue that, broadly speaking, there are three rival accounts of the relationsh...
In his Metaphysics of Morals, Kant famously wrote “The distinction between virtue and vice can never...
This is a superb collection of essays on the virtues. Its only rival is the fine anthology The Virtu...
Contemporary critics of egoism theories take on easy targets when they show (a) that they are not re...
Burtchaell provides a clear, engagingly written, thoughtful, and impassioned discussion of developme...
What is at stake in determining how to translate the central term of Greek ethical philosophy, that ...
Anyone familiar with Richard Kraut's work in ancient philosophy will be excited to see him putting a...
An authority on the moral philosophy of Plato and Aristotle, Kraut (Northwestern) offers an original...
No Abs Richard Kraut’s What is Good and Why is a development and defense of devel-opmentalism. But K...
This volume is a collection of eleven essays by Mark Schroeder, including one previously unpublished...
Erik Wielenberg’s new book Robust Ethics: The Metaphysics and Epistemology of Godless Normative Real...
How to be Good is an accessible, engagingly written primer on moral philosophy and practice. The boo...
General Ethics develops a metaethical, sociological, and historical interpretive approach to ethics ...
Introducing Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics to undergraduates, which is the explicit goal of Michael ...
In this book review I argue that, broadly speaking, there are three rival accounts of the relationsh...
In his Metaphysics of Morals, Kant famously wrote “The distinction between virtue and vice can never...
This is a superb collection of essays on the virtues. Its only rival is the fine anthology The Virtu...
Contemporary critics of egoism theories take on easy targets when they show (a) that they are not re...
Burtchaell provides a clear, engagingly written, thoughtful, and impassioned discussion of developme...
What is at stake in determining how to translate the central term of Greek ethical philosophy, that ...