G. E. Moore and Intrinsic Goodness  

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-"From [[Henry Sidgwick|Sidgwick]] [ [[G. E. Moore]] ] might have learnt that [[good]] is ever our good, and from [[Herbert Spencer|Spencer]] and [[Jean-Marie Guyau|Guyau]] that what we can and do ... And so, having disposed of his intrinsic good, we might take courage against that fearsome [[naturalistic fallacy]] to seek ..."--"[[G. E. Moore and Intrinsic Goodness]]" (1928) is a text by Edward F. Mettrick.+"From [[Henry Sidgwick|Sidgwick]] [ [[G. E. Moore]] ] might have learnt that [[good]] is ever our good, and from [[Herbert Spencer|Spencer]] and [[Jean-Marie Guyau|Guyau]] that what we can and do perceive as good is not remote from the background of life which nurtures us. And so, having disposed of his intrinsic good, we might take courage against that fearsome [[naturalistic fallacy]] to seek into the conditions of, and therfore to ask what is, the meaning of good."--"[[G. E. Moore and Intrinsic Goodness]]" (1928) is a text by Edward F. Mettrick.

Revision as of 10:53, 30 January 2020

"From Sidgwick [ G. E. Moore ] might have learnt that good is ever our good, and from Spencer and Guyau that what we can and do perceive as good is not remote from the background of life which nurtures us. And so, having disposed of his intrinsic good, we might take courage against that fearsome naturalistic fallacy to seek into the conditions of, and therfore to ask what is, the meaning of good."--"G. E. Moore and Intrinsic Goodness" (1928) is a text by Edward F. Mettrick.


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"G. E. Moore and Intrinsic Goodness" (1928) is a text by Edward F. Mettrick.

References

"G. E. Moore and Intrinsic Goodness," International Journal of Ethics, XXXVIII (1927-38), pp. 389-400.




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