CitedEvidence
User Settings

The good and the right (I): intuitionism, Kantianism

Robert Kane-2010-08-12-Cambridge University Press eBooks
0

TL;DRAbstract

In the next three chapters, I compare the merits of the theory developed in the preceding chapters to some alternative contemporary normative ethical theories. This chapter considers intuitionist and Kantian approaches to ethics, Chapter 16, utilitarian and consequentialist theories, and Chapter 17, contractualist theories. Other approaches to ethics, including virtue ethics and feminist views, will be more briefly considered in the final chapter, which deals with the implications of the moral theory for social and applied ethics, political philosophy, law and moral education. This chapter begins with a brief review of the theory.

Chat with Paper

AI Agents for this Paper

In the next three chapters, I compare the merits of the theory developed in the preceding chapters to some alternative contemporary normative ethical theories. This chapter considers intuitionist and Kantian approaches to ethics, Chapter 16, utilitarian and consequentialist theories, and Chapter 17, contractualist theories. Other approaches to ethics, including virtue ethics and feminist views, will be more briefly considered in the final chapter, which deals with the implications of the moral theory for social and applied ethics, political philosophy, law and moral education. This chapter begins with a brief review of the theory.

Keywords

IntuitionismPhilosophyEpistemology

Chat

Click to start Chat