[PDF] from jhu.eduNL Sturgeon - Hume studies, 2011 - muse.jhu.edu ... 28. That Hume's theory of belief allows him to identify the belief that one is having a moral feeling with the feeling itself was first suggested, to my knowledge, by Arthur N. Prior, Logic and the Basis of Ethics (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1949), 67. ... Cited by 13 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 4 versions
P Frierson… - 2011 - books.google.com ... With respect to morals, for example, he affirms the “formal ground of obligation” (: of Wolff's perfection- ist and rationalist ethical theory, while also claiming that Hutcheson's “moralfeeling” provides “a starting point” for working out the “material principles of obligation ... Related articles
[PDF] from jhu.eduD Shaw - Hume studies, 2011 - muse.jhu.edu That really does demote reason to a very subservient position in ethics. It is in this passage that Hume overstates his case against ethical rationaUsm. For this final claim about reason being the slave ofthe passions goes well beyond what the preceding arguments, even ... Cited by 3 - Related articles - All 3 versions
[PDF] from jhu.eduDC Ainslie - Hume Studies, 2011 - muse.jhu.edu Generally speaking, there are two ways to oppose another philosopher's view. You can argue against it—for example, by finding counterexamples, showing that it entails various unpalatable or absurd conclusions, or by raising objec- tions to the arguments offered in its support. Or ... All 2 versions
C Kellogg… - Theory & Event, 2011 - muse.jhu.edu ... 24 In other words, when we ponder the concept of law with no specific thing to legislate in mind, and all practical reasons for being good are excluded, we are left simply with the fact of our existence and moralfeeling still presses upon us. ... Related articles