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Moral Articulation

On the Development of New Moral Concepts

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
256 Seiten
2024
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-769157-1 (ISBN)
67,30 inkl. MwSt
This book explores historical changes in the words and concepts we use to describe morally significant experiences and events. Focusing on cases like the invention of the term
This book explores the historical development of new moral concepts. Starting from examples of new moral terms invented in the twentieth century, like 'sexual harassment', 'genocide', 'racism', and 'hate speech', this book asks: what we are doing when we bring ethically significant acts and events under new descriptions? Are we simply naming moral phenomena that already exist, fully formed and intact, prior to their expression in language? Or are moral phenomena sensitive to the descriptions under which they fall, such that new modes of moral expression can reshape the phenomena they bring to light?

Moral Articulation outlines an ethical framework that allows us to embrace a version of the latter, transformative view without sacrificing notions of moral truth, objectivity, and knowledge. The book presents a view of moral meaningfulness as extending beyond what we can presently put into words, urging that expansions in our moral vocabularies often begin in dissonant experiences of conceptual and linguistic limits. Resisting a tendency in contemporary ethics to start with situations and dilemmas whose descriptions are already given, this book argues that the struggle to piece together a discursively articulate picture of a situation is an ethical task in its own right. The result is a picture of ethical life that emphasizes the role of language in shaping who we are.

Matthew Congdon is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University. His work has appeared in The Philosophical Quarterly, Analysis, The European Journal of Philosophy, Episteme, and Philosophical Topics, among another publications.

Acknowledgments

Introduction
1. Changing Our Concepts
§1.1. Discursive Breakdown
§1.2. Meaning and Discourse
§1.3. The Discursive Theory of Meaning as a Questionable Supposition of Much Contemporary Ethical Theory
§1.4. Changing Conceptual Schemes
§1.5. The Expressive Logic of Articulation
§1.6. Conclusion
2. Thinking Beyond Language
§2.1. Concepts and Language
§2.2. Concepts and Reality
§2.3. Dissonance in the Space of Reasons
3. Creative Resentments
§3.1. The Problem
§3.2. Norm-Creative Resentments
§3.3. The Prior Norm Requirement
§3.4. The Articulation Model of Emotion
§3.5. Conclusion
4. Is Morality Loopy?
§4.1. A Problem in Critical Social Philosophy
§4.2. Hacking on Child Abuse: A Case Study in Causal Discursive Construction
§4.3. Rational Discursive Construction
§4.4. From Intimate Articulation to Moral Articulation
§4.5. Some Formal Features of Moral Articulation
§4.6. Conclusion
5. Changing Our Nature
§5.1. The Immutability Thesis
§5.2. Human Natural History
§5.3. Articulating Our Nature
6. Moral Progress and Immanent Critique
§6.1. An Inescapable Circularity?
§6.2. Five Theses on Moral Progress
Conclusion

Bibliography
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 203 x 147 mm
Gewicht 431 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Ethik
Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Sprachphilosophie
ISBN-10 0-19-769157-9 / 0197691579
ISBN-13 978-0-19-769157-1 / 9780197691571
Zustand Neuware
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