This Element presents an interpretation and defence of Philippa Foot's ethical naturalism. It begins with the often neglected grammatical method that Foot derives from an interpretation of Ludwig Wittgenstein's later philosophy. This method shapes her approach to understanding goodness as well as the role that she attributes to human nature in ethical judgment. Moral virtues understood as perfections of human powers are central to Foot's account of ethical judgment. The thrust of the interpretation offered here is that Foot's metaethics takes ethical judgment to be tied to our self-understanding as a sort of rational animal. Foot's metaethics thereby offers a compelling contemporary approach that preserves some of the best insights of the Aristotelian tradition in practical philosophy.
In the third Friarsgate Inheritance novel, New York Times bestselling author Bertrice Small takes us back to the sensuality, drama, and intrigue of King Henry's sixteenth-century court to tell the...
Ela é capaz de muitas coisas - inclusive deixá-lo louco.No início de sua temporada em Londres, Philippa Clavering descobre que sua amiga Susan está sendo cortejada pelo cavalheiro errado e...
Elle est capable de beaucoup de choses, y compris de le rendre fou...Au début de leur saison londonienne, Philippa Clavering découvre que son amie Susan n'est pas courtisée par le bon gentleman et...