Moral Values

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A01=Nicolai Hartmann
Antinomical Relation
Author_Nicolai Hartmann
axiological analysis
brotherly
Category=QDTQ
complex moral value systems
conditioning
Conditioning Relation
Conferring
Destiny
Embraced
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
ethical phenomenology
Faithful Man
Follow
Hold
Honesty
ideal
Ideal Self-existence
Inclined
Independent
Living
love
Mankind
normative ethics theory
personal
philosophical anthropology
Pride
radiant
Radiant Virtue
relation
self-existence
situational
Situational Values
Strong
Sui
Super-imposed
Timeless
Unlimited
Unstable
Valuational Antinomies
value hierarchy
Violate
virtue
virtue epistemology

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765809629
  • Weight: 793g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Dec 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Nicolai Hartmann (1882-1950), along with Henri Bergson and Martin Heidegger, was instrumental in restoring metaphysics to the study of philosophy. Unlike his contemporaries, however, Hartmann was clearly influenced by Plato. His tour-de-force, Ethik, published in English in 1932 as Ethics, may be the most outstanding work on moral philosophy produced in the twentieth century.

In the first part of Ethics (Moral Phenomena), Hartmann was concerned with the structure of ethical phenomena, and criticized utilitarianism, Kantianism, and relativism as misleading approaches. In the second part, Moral Values, the author describes all values as forming a complex and as yet imperfectly known system. The actualization of the non-moral and elementary moral values is a necessary condition for the actualization of the higher values. It is on this account that rudimentary values have a prior claim.

Hartmann outlines the main features of the chief virtues, and shows that the moral disposition required in any exigency is always a specific synthesis of various and often conflicting values. Specifically describing fundamental moral values-such as goodness, nobility, and vitality-and special moral values-such as justice, wisdom, courage, self-control, trustworthiness, and modesty-Hartmann takes theoretical philosophy and brings it very much into the realm of the practical.

A compelling and insightful volume, Moral Values remains an essential contribution to the moral and ethical literature of the twentieth century. Hartmann offers a self-contained system of ethics that yet offers a conservative outlook on social life.

Nicolai Hartmann was born in 1882 in Riga, Latvia, of German parents. He studied philosophy and classics, first in St. Petersburg and later in Marburg, where he was appointed to a chair of philosophy in 1920. In 1931, after a short spell at the University of Cologne, Hartmann was offered the prestigious chair of philosophy by the University of Berlin, where he lectured until the end of the war, untainted by Nazism. From 1945 until his death in 1950 he held a chair of philosophy at the University of Gottingen. Andreas A.M. Kinneging is associate professor in legal philosophy at the University of Leiden, and author of several works in normative theory and intellectual history, including Aristocracy, Antiquity, and History: Classicism in Political Thought, published by Transaction.

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