• How to Be a Moral Taste Theorist

    Mcateer, John 2016 Essays in Philosophy , Vol. 17 , Issue 1 , S. 5 ff. ( Zeitschrift ) Englisch 1526-0569 10.7710/1526-0569.1541 Abstract

    In this paper, I attempt to recover an 18th Century approach to moral theory that can be called Moral Taste Theory. Through an exploration of 18th Century sources I define the characteristics of moral taste theory and to distinguish it from its closest rival, moral sense theory. In general a moral taste theorist holds that moral judgments are analogous to aesthetic judgments while a moral sense theorist holds that moral judgments are analogous to physical sense perception. Francis Hutcheson was a paradigmatic moral sense theorist, but I argue that David Hume is best understood as a moral taste theorist. If we do not understand the concept of moral taste, we cannot understand 18th Century moral philosophy, and, more importantly, we will miss out on an important source of inspiration for 21st Century moral philosophy.

    Schlagwörter

    Applied Philosophy | Contemporary Philosophy

    Loading...
Mcateer, John
Applied Philosophy
Contemporary Philosophy

  • keine externen Weblinks