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Philosophers have been sharply divided in attempts to reconcile the
validity of the moral distinctions essential to social well-being
with the apparent ethical neutrality of the factual world. The
failure to find an agreed solution to this problem produced the
popular theory of Logical Empiricism, according to which ethical
statements are meaningless. This and other kindred doctrines of
ethical relativism that emerged in the first half of the twentieth
century, are obviously fatal to the Christian belief that there is
'down here below' a recognisable Kingdom of God that men were born
to serve. In this book, originally published in 1961, the author
offer a complete analysis of the nature of ethical perception to
show how the two factors in moral decisions - a sense of moral
obligation, and recognisable objective ethical values - can both be
brought into a single coherent system of truth. He isolates the
unique and ultimate element common to all our ethical and moral
concepts and presents a clear view that the basic values recognised
in a reasonable humanistic morality are embraced in the wider
ideals of Christian Love. The purpose is to present a coherent
system of moral truth that will, in this scientific age, commend
itself to thoughtful people without offending their intelligence.
Philosophers have been sharply divided in attempts to reconcile the
validity of the moral distinctions essential to social well-being
with the apparent ethical neutrality of the factual world. The
failure to find an agreed solution to this problem produced the
popular theory of Logical Empiricism, according to which ethical
statements are meaningless. This and other kindred doctrines of
ethical relativism that emerged in the first half of the twentieth
century, are obviously fatal to the Christian belief that there is
'down here below' a recognisable Kingdom of God that men were born
to serve. In this book, originally published in 1961, the author
offer a complete analysis of the nature of ethical perception to
show how the two factors in moral decisions - a sense of moral
obligation, and recognisable objective ethical values - can both be
brought into a single coherent system of truth. He isolates the
unique and ultimate element common to all our ethical and moral
concepts and presents a clear view that the basic values recognised
in a reasonable humanistic morality are embraced in the wider
ideals of Christian Love. The purpose is to present a coherent
system of moral truth that will, in this scientific age, commend
itself to thoughtful people without offending their intelligence.
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