In this book, originally published in 1959, the author believes
that general moral concepts embody conceptions of standards in
accordance with which particular moral judgments proceed and these
may become objects of theoretical understanding and knowledge - and
hence be treated as facts in some context of a moral nature - in an
ethical enquiry that is philosophical in character. The book
clarifies the implications of conceptions which are used when
aspects of our experiences are evaluated from a distinctive point
of view, namely that of morality. It examines some of the theories
which suggest that the function of ethical philosophy is something
quite other than what traditional philosophers believed it to be,
namely by asking what goodness or justice is.
General
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