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Early Ethical Writings of Aurel Kolnai /

"This title was first published in 2002: Kolnai's later work in moral philosophy is well-known, and interest in it continues to grow, but his dissertation, Ethical Value and Reality, has received little attention - although Kolnai himself said that it contains the germs of nearly all his s...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Dunlop, Francis (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Alemán
Publicado: London : Taylor and Francis, 2017.
Edición:First edition.
Colección:Routledge revivals.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Title; Copyright; Contents; Translator's Introduction; Translator's Preface; ETHICAL VALUE AND REALITY; Preface; List of Works Consulted; Introduction: The Problem of a Completely Valid Ethics and the Limits of Morality; Chapter One: Ethical Value; 1 Primary data of ethics; 2 The phenomenological ethic of values; 3 The bearer of value and the ethical end; 4 The special place of ethical value; 5 Conflict between ethical values; Chapter Two: The Limits of the Ethical End; 1 The presuppositions of adopting an end; 2 Ideal and Reality; 3 The moral suppression of need; 4 Ethical Reform
  • 5 Résumé on limitationChapter Three: The Gradation of Ethical Value-Emphases; 1 The order of values; 2 The nature of emphasis and gradation; 3 Gradations of emphasis and ethical freedom; 4 Gradation in the individual moral act and the stratification of intention; 5 The coming together of value-emphases; 6 Gradation of emphasis and the finitude of the moral world; Chapter Four: Some Criticisms of One-Sided Ethical Approaches; Introduction; 1 The Ethic of Stoicism; 2 Practical value-monism from Kant to Marx; 3 The ethic of the order of justice and the ethic of regulation
  • 4 The ethical outlook of psychoanalysisChapter Five: Gradation in the Types of Value-Experience; Introduction: the opposition of value and reality; 1 The experience of exclusion; 2 The experience of coordination; 3 The experience of incorporation; 4 The experience of directness; Chapter Six: Persons and Responsibility; 1 Gradation in conduct; 2 The meaning of responsibility; 3 Personalistic ethics; Concluding Remarks: The Possibility of an Ethics Close to Reality; THE STRUCTURE OF MORAL INTENTION; DUTY, INCLINATION AND ""MORAL-MINDEDNESS; Index