
Joseph Butler's Fifteen Sermons (1729) Is A Classic Work Of Moral Philosophy, Which Remains Widely Influential. The Topics Butler Discusses Include The Role Of Conscience In Human Nature, Self-love And Egoism, Compassion, Resentment And Forgiveness, And Love Of Our Neighbour And Of God. The Text Of The Enlarged And Corrected Second Edition Is Here Presented Together With A Selection Of Butler's Other Ethical Writings: A Dissertation Of The Nature Of Virtue, A Sermon Preached Before The House Of Lords, And Relevant Extracts From His Correspondence With Samuel Clarke. While This Is A Readers' Edition That Avoids Cluttering Butler's Text With Textual Variants And Intrusive Footnotes, It Comes Complete With Scholarly Apparatus Intended To Aid The Reader In Studying Butlers Work In Depth. David Mcnaughton Contributes A Substantial Historical And Philosophical Introduction That Highlights The Continuing Importance Of These Works. In Addition, There Are Extensive Notes At The End Of The Volume, Including Significant Textual Variants, And Full Details Of Butler's Sources And References, As Well As Short Summaries Of Butler's Predecessors, And A Selective Bibliography. This Will Be The Definitive Resource For Anyone Interested In Butler's Moral Philosophy.
This volume investigates the foundational moral philosophy of Joseph Butler, specifically addressing the interplay between conscience, self-love, and human nature. David McNaughton, a scholar of moral philosophy, provides a comprehensive framework for understanding Butler's 18th-century arguments by contextualizing them within the broader history of ethical thought. The text utilizes the second edition of Butler's sermons as a primary source to explore the rational basis for virtue and the obligation to act in accordance with human nature.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of moral philosophy regard this edition as a definitive resource for accessing Butler's ethical framework without the distraction of excessive textual clutter. Readers frequently note that the inclusion of McNaughton's introduction and the extensive notes makes this an ideal text for both academic study and independent research.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191080462
ISBN-13:
9780191080463
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