Moral animals

by Catherine Wilson

No reviews yet
First published: 2004 1 language ISBN: 9780199228096
Description
"In Moral Animals, Catherine Wilson develops a theory of morality based on two fundamental premises: first, that moral progress implies the evolution of moral ideals involving restraint and sacrifice; second, that human beings are outfitted by nature with selfish motivations, intentions, and ambitions, that place constraints on what morality can demand of them. Formative claims, she goes on to show, can be understood as projective hypotheses concerning the conduct of realistically-described nonideal agents in preferred fictional worlds. Such claims differ from empirical hypotheses, insofar as the cannot be verified by observation and experiment.

Yet many, though not all, moral claims are susceptible of confirmation to the extent that they command the agreement of well-informed inquirers." "With this foundation in place, Wilson turns to a defence of egalitarianism intended to address the objection that the importance of our nonmoral projects, our natural acquisitiveness and partiality, and our meritocratic commitments render social equality a mere abstract ideal. Employing the basic notion of a symmetrical division of the co-operative surplus, she argues that social justice with respect to global disparities in well-being and in the condition of women relative to men depends on the relinquishment of natural and acquired advantage that is central to the concept of morality."--Jacket.

Reviews

Log in or sign up to write a review.

No reviews yet. Be the first!


More by Catherine Wilson


You Might Also Like

More in Human beings
Brave New World

Brave New World

Aldous Huxley
Saint Francis of Assisi

Saint Francis of Assisi

Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Pensées

Pensées

Blaise Pascal
An essay on man

An essay on man

Alexander Pope