Data of Ethics

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A01=Herbert Spencer
Absolute Ethics
Agreeable Feeling
Altruistic Pleasure
Animal Kingdom
Author_Herbert Spencer
Category=QD
Category=QDTQ
Chronic
Complete Living
Disagreeable Feeling
Divine Injunction
Egoistic Claims
Egoistic Hedonism
Egoistic Pleasure
Egoistic Satisfactions
empirical moral inquiry
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Ethics Deals
evolutionary ethics
Evolved Conduct
Insensible Gradations
Intercostal Muscles
Mental Development
moral philosophy
Negative Pain
Parental Altruism
Pleasurable Consciousness
psychological perspectives
Remote Results
Representative Feelings
scientific approach to ethical theory
Self-regarding Feelings
sociological analysis
Sympathetic Pleasures
Universalistic Hedonism
utilitarian theory

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138535046
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In this amazingly prophetic work, done late in his career, Herbert Spencer offers an approach to ethics that anticipates developments throughout the twentieth century. He moves away from the twin evils of ethical doctrines bequeathed to us by an ancient past that are simply no longer feasible but also avoids modern standards of ethical conduct that are simply impossible to attain. "By association with rules that cannot be obeyed," Spencer writes, "rules that can be obeyed lose their authority."

The volume opens with three chapters on conduct: its evolution, good and bad, and ways of judgment. This is followed by a series of chapters that examine ethics from a variety of scientific perspectives: physics, biology, psychology, and sociology. The work then moves on to specific issues of deep human concern: the relativity of pleasures and pain, egoism versus altruism in explaining actions, and trial and compromise in decision-making about ethical concerns.

Spencer's work anticipates the movement toward pragmatic, naturalistic, and even positivist approaches to ethics. He emphasizes that a relativist approach while in keeping with the spirit of the industrial age, also poses a variety of problems that admit only of empirical solutions. He understands that his critical stance on absolutism should not blind researchers to the ideals assumed by the ancients that assist people in their everyday living. In short, this is a remarkable work, entirely modern, and yet containing a sharp evaluation of how ethical data serve to enhance ethical conduct.

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