copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
Intuitionism in Ethics - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy One of the most distinctive features of Ethical Intuitionism is its epistemology All of the classic intuitionists maintained that basic moral propositions are self-evident—that is, evident in and of themselves—and so can be known without the need of any argument
Intuitionism: Grasping Moral Truths Beyond Reason But how can something so intangible be trusted as a source of moral knowledge? In this blog, we will dive into intuitionism, exploring its core ideas, its strengths, and its challenges, and understanding why some philosophers argue it is a compelling way to grasp moral truths beyond reason
Minding the gap between logic and intuition: an interpretative approach . . . In this paper, I argue that an interpretative approach to ethical analysis, involving an examination of the ways in which ethical arguments are constructed and shared, can help ethicists to understand the origins of this gap between logic and intuition
Ethical intuitionism - Wikipedia Ethical intuitionism Ethical intuitionism (also called moral intuitionism) is a view or family of views in moral epistemology (and, on some definitions, metaphysics)
Moral Intuitions and Their Reliability Most ethicists do not give a particularly detailed descriptive account of intuition because they are more interested in the practice of normative ethics than in moral psychology
MORAL INTUITION, MORAL THEORY, AND PRACTICAL ETHICS In the history of moral philosophy, the idea that moral intuitions have normative authority has been associated, unsurprisingly, with a cluster of theories that have traveled under the label ‘Intuitionism ’ Those doctrines are many and various and I do not propose to disentangle them
The Phenomenology of Moral Intuition - Springer There is growing agreement that intuition conceived as a kind of seeming is essential for both the justification of moral judgment and the confirmation of ethical theories This paper describes several importantly diferent kinds of intuition, particularly the episodic kinds often called seemings
The Good in the Right: A Theory of Intuition and Intrinsic . . . - JSTOR Ethical intuitionism as developed in this book may be viewed in two ways: as an ethical theory and as a full-scale moral philosophy providing both an account of moral principles and judgments—a metaethical account—and a set of basic moral standards
Understanding Moral Intuitionism: Navigating Ethics through Intuition . . . At the core of moral intuitionism is the belief that ethical knowledge isn’t always derived from logical reasoning or empirical evidence Instead, moral truths are self-evident, and we simply “know” them, often without being able to articulate why