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基本説明
Shows that the traditional separation between "is" and "ought" overlooks their profound coincidence, and clarifies the determining, role of affectivity and katharsis in all ethical experiences.
Full Description
This work renews the basic questions and principles of philosophical ethics and provides a thorough account of how being oneself presupposes freedom and responsibility. Elements of Ethics focuses on the descriptive and conceptual analysis of the experiences through which human lives become aware of themselves and shows how we are provoked to respond appropriately to the various dimensions and phenomena of the universe.
Operating on the provocative thesis that "if the ethical is real, it cannot be proved, because it is either nothing at all or an irreducible origin," this book pursues the question that defines ethics: "How should I live?" After setting out a preliminary definition of terms, Elements of Ethics gives insight into the relation of human individuals and the world by showing that the traditional separation between "is" and "ought" overlooks their profound coincidence, and by clarifying the determining, though often overlooked, role of affectivity and katharsis in all ethical experiences.
Contents
@fmct:Contents @toc4:Preface iii From "Know Yourself!" to Correspondence iii @toc2:1 Introduction 0 2 From Doing to Living 00 3 Affections 00 4 Desire 000 5 Correspondence 000 6 The Analogy of Should 000 7 Unity and Universality 000 8 Freedom 000 9 CONSCIENCE 000 10 Adventures 000 11 Religion 000 @toc4:Index 000 Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: Ethics