Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Moral Articulation

View through CrossRef
Abstract This book explores the historical development of new moral concepts, an activity the author labels “moral articulation.” Starting from examples of new moral language developed in the twentieth century, like ‘sexual harassment’, ‘genocide’, ‘racism’, and ‘hate speech’, this book asks: are we simply naming moral realities that already existed, fully formed and intact, prior to their expression in language? Or do changes in our concepts and language sometimes reshape the objects they bring to light? Moral Articulation outlines an ethical framework that allows us to embrace a version of the latter, transformative view without sacrificing notions of moral truth, objectivity, and knowledge. The result is a variation of moral realism that is sensitive to deep historical changes in morality. The book presents a view of moral value as extending beyond what we are presently able to put into words, urging that new developments in moral language often begin in dissonant experiences of conceptual and discursive breakdown. Resisting a tendency in contemporary ethics to start with situations and dilemmas whose descriptions are already given, this book argues that the struggle to piece together a discursively articulate picture of a situation in the first place is an ethical task in its own right. The result is a thoroughly historical yet objective picture of ethics that emphasizes the role of language in prompting moral change in our life-form. It draws inspiration from Aristotelian, Hegelian, Wittgensteinian, and liberatory praxis-inspired philosophy, as well as from Charles Taylor and Iris Murdoch.
Oxford University PressNew York
Title: Moral Articulation
Description:
Abstract This book explores the historical development of new moral concepts, an activity the author labels “moral articulation.
” Starting from examples of new moral language developed in the twentieth century, like ‘sexual harassment’, ‘genocide’, ‘racism’, and ‘hate speech’, this book asks: are we simply naming moral realities that already existed, fully formed and intact, prior to their expression in language? Or do changes in our concepts and language sometimes reshape the objects they bring to light? Moral Articulation outlines an ethical framework that allows us to embrace a version of the latter, transformative view without sacrificing notions of moral truth, objectivity, and knowledge.
The result is a variation of moral realism that is sensitive to deep historical changes in morality.
The book presents a view of moral value as extending beyond what we are presently able to put into words, urging that new developments in moral language often begin in dissonant experiences of conceptual and discursive breakdown.
Resisting a tendency in contemporary ethics to start with situations and dilemmas whose descriptions are already given, this book argues that the struggle to piece together a discursively articulate picture of a situation in the first place is an ethical task in its own right.
The result is a thoroughly historical yet objective picture of ethics that emphasizes the role of language in prompting moral change in our life-form.
It draws inspiration from Aristotelian, Hegelian, Wittgensteinian, and liberatory praxis-inspired philosophy, as well as from Charles Taylor and Iris Murdoch.

Related Results

Paul Ricoeur's Moral Anthropology
Paul Ricoeur's Moral Anthropology
Paul Ricœur’s Moral Anthropology is a guide for readers who are interested in Paul Ricœur’s thoughts on morals in general, bringing together the different aspects of what Geoffrey ...
Knowing Moral Truth
Knowing Moral Truth
This is a book on metaethics and moral epistemology. It asks two fundamental questions: (i) Is there any such thing as (non-relative) moral truth?; and (ii) If there is such truth,...
Innocence Lost
Innocence Lost
Abstract Our lives are such that moral wrongdoing is sometimes inescapable for us. We have moral responsibilities to persons which may conflict and which it is wrong...
The Evil Within
The Evil Within
Thomas Jefferson and Edward Coles were men of similar background, but the former remained a slaveholder while the latter emancipated his slaves. Examining the ways in which people ...
Biomedical Moral Enhancement and Moral Progress
Biomedical Moral Enhancement and Moral Progress
This chapter critically examines a different and highly provocative response to the thesis that evolved human moral psychology poses severe and inflexible limitations on moral prog...
Moral Feelings, Moral Reality, and Moral Progress
Moral Feelings, Moral Reality, and Moral Progress
Abstract This book consists of two essays that are related to each other: “Gut Feelings and Moral Knowledge” and “Moral Reality and Moral Progress.” The longer secon...
Moral Theory
Moral Theory
Moral Theory: An Introduction explores some of the most historically important and currently debated moral theories about the nature of the right and good. Providing an introductio...
Moral Psychology of Confucian Shame
Moral Psychology of Confucian Shame
Early Confucian philosophers (notably Confucius and Mencius) emphasized moral significance of shame in self-cultivation and learning. In their discussion, shame is not just a painf...

Back to Top