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  • Reason in Action: Collected Essays Volume I

    Reason in Action by Finnis, John;

    Collected Essays Volume I

    Series: Collected Essays of John Finnis;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 19 September 2013

    • ISBN 9780199689941
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages384 pages
    • Size 234x157x21 mm
    • Weight 564 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    Reason in Action collects John Finnis's work on practical reason and moral philosophy. Ranging from foundational issues of meta-ethics to modern ethical debates, the essays trace the emergence and development of his new classical theory of natural law through close engagement with a broad range of contemporary thinkers and problems.

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    Long description:

    Reason in Action collects John Finnis's work on the theory of practical reason and moral philosophy. The essays in the volume range from foundational issues of meta-ethics to the practical application of natural law theory to ethical problems such as nuclear deterrence, obscenity and free speech, and abortion and cloning.

    Defending the objectivity of some evaluative and moral judgments, the volume's meta-ethical papers debate with figures as diverse as Jurgen Habermas, Bernard Williams, David Hume, Max Weber, and Christine Korsgaard, and offer a new understanding of Wittgenstein's On Certainty. Further papers engage with Philippa Foot, Geoffrey Warnock, Leo Strauss, Terence Irwin, Matthew Kramer, neo-scholastic interpreters of Aquinas, utilitarians, game theorists, and Immanuel Kant on the shape of moral thought. John Rawls's conception of public reason, J.S. Mill's understanding of free speech, and Jacques Maritain's appeal to "connatural" knowledge are critically contested. Foundational questions addressed in the volume include: how legal reasoning differs from general practical reasoning; how aesthetic appreciation differs from erotic attraction; how subrational elements enter into the rational standard of fairness; how virtues depend upon principles and norms; and how incommensurabilities count in moral thought.

    These essays mark the development of Finnis's new classical theory of natural law, engaged with contemporary thinkers and problems. Several essays, including two previously unpublished, show the theory's emergence before Natural Law and Natural Rights. Other unpublished essays include a discussion of pornography, an analysis of freedom of speech, and a substantive introduction reflecting on the theory, its reception, and the convergence on it of capabilities theorists such as Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction
    Foundations
    Practical Reason's Foundations
    Discourse, Truth, and Friendship
    Scepticism's Self-Refutation
    Self-refutation Revisited
    Bernard Williams on Truth's Values
    Reason, Authority, and Friendship
    Reason, Universality, and Moral Thought
    Objectivity and Content in Ethics
    Is and Ought in Aquinas
    Building on the Foundations
    Action's Most Ultimate End
    Prudence about Ends
    Moral Absolutes in Aristotle and Aquinas
    "Natural Law"
    Legal Reasoning as Practical Reason
    Public Reason and Unreason
    Commensuration and Public Reason
    "Public Reason" and Moral Debate
    Reason, Passions, and Free Speech
    Freedom of Speech
    Pornography

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