
Christine M. Korsgaard Is One Of Today's Leading Moral Philosophers: This Volume Collects Ten Influential Papers By Her On Practical Reason And Moral Psychology. Korsgaard Draws On The Work Of Important Figures In The History Of Philosophy Such As Plato, Aristotle, Kant, And Hume, Showing How Their Ideas Can Inform The Solution Of Contemporary And Traditional Philosophical Problems, Such As The Foundations Of Morality And Practical Reason, The Nature Of Agency, And The Role Of The Emotions In Action. In Part 1, The Principles Of Practical Reason, Korsgaard Defends The View That The Principles Of Practical Reason Are Constitutive Principles Of Action. By Governing Our Actions In Accordance With Kant's Categorical Imperative And The Principle Of Instrumental Reason, She Argues, We Take Control Of Our Own Movements And So Render Ourselves Active, Self-determining Beings. She Criticizes Rival Attempts To Give A Normative Foundation To The Principles Of Practical Reason, Challenges The Claims Of The Principle Of Maximizing One's Own Interests To Be A Rational Principle, And Argues For Some Deep Continuities Between Plato's Account Of The Connection Between Justice And Agency And Kant's Account Of The Connection Between Autonomy And Agency. In Part Ii, Moral Virtue And Moral Psychology, Korsgaard Takes Up The Question Of The Role Of Our More Passive Or Receptive Faculties--our Emotions And Responses --in Constituting Our Agency. She Sketches A Reading Of The Nicomachean Ethics, Based On The Idea That Our Emotions Can Serve As Perceptions Of Good And Evil, And Argues That This View Of The Emotions Is At The Root Of The Apparent Differences Between Aristotle And Kant's Accounts Of Morality. She Argues That In Fact, Aristotle And Kant Share A Distinctive View About The Locus Of Moral Value And The Nature Of Human Choice That, Among Other Things, Gives Them Account Of What It Means To Act Rationally That Is Superior To Other Accounts. In Part Iii, Other Reflections, Korsgaard
This volume investigates the foundational question of how the principles of practical reason function as constitutive elements of human agency. Christine M. Korsgaard, a prominent contemporary moral philosopher, synthesizes historical perspectives from Plato, Aristotle, Kant, and Hume to address modern debates in ethics. She argues that by adhering to principles of practical reason, individuals transform mere movements into intentional, self-determined actions.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of ethics frequently cite this collection as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of Kantian and Aristotelian thought. Readers often note the high academic density of the prose, which requires significant familiarity with the history of philosophy to fully parse.
Page Count:
357
Publication Date:
2008-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
0191564591
ISBN-13:
9780191564598
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