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Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy

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ISBN-10: 067426858X

ISBN-13: 9780674268586

Edition: 1985

Authors: Bernard Williams

List price: $35.00
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Description:

In this book Bernard Williams delivers a sustained indictment of moral theory from Kant onward. His goal is nothing less than to reorient ethics toward the individual. He deals with the most thorny questions in contemporary philosophy and offers new ideas about issues such as relativism, objectivity, and the possibility of ethical knowledge.
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Book details

List price: $35.00
Copyright year: 1985
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 3/15/1986
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 244
Size: 6.00" wide x 9.25" long x 0.70" tall
Weight: 0.990
Language: English

Sartre is the dominant figure in post-war French intellectual life. A graduate of the prestigious Ecole Normale Superieure with an agregation in philosophy, Sartre has been a major figure on the literary and philosophical scenes since the late 1930s. Widely known as an atheistic proponent of existentialism, he emphasized the priority of existence over preconceived essences and the importance of human freedom. In his first and best novel, Nausea (1938), Sartre contrasted the fluidity of human consciousness with the apparent solidity of external reality and satirized the hypocrisies and pretensions of bourgeois idealism. Sartre's theater is also highly ideological, emphasizing the importance…    

Socrates' Question
The Archimedean Point
Foundations: Well-Being
Foundations: Practical Reason
Styles of Ethical Theory
Theory and Prejudice
The Linguistic Turn
Knowledge, Science, Convergence
Relativism and Reflection
Morality, the Peculiar Institution Postscript
Notes
Index