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Wisdom, intuition and ethicsCurnow, Trevor January 1995 (has links)
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Impartiality and the personal point of viewPowers, Gary Madison January 1988 (has links)
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Motivation and moral realismSmith, Michael Andrew January 1989 (has links)
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The value of the language of rights in Christian ethics, with particular reference to reproductive rightsCronin, Kieran James January 1989 (has links)
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Just health care in Nigeria : the foundations for an African ethical frameworkUjewe, Samuel Jonathan January 2016 (has links)
Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa share at least three things: cultural heritage, a high burden of disease and a low financial commitment to health care. This thesis asks questions of justice about health care systems in Sub-Saharan Africa, in particular Nigeria. The questions are about access to the available health resources and services within African health care systems. While the sub-region as a whole cannot boast of good health care, certain population groups are relatively more disadvantaged. This suggests either or both of two problems: a) that access to basic health care is not proportionate to the populations’ needs; and/or b) that the distribution of the available health care resources favour some over others. Attempts to improve population health have focused on empirical, economic or social strategies. These tend to overlook the ethical dynamics surrounding access to and the distribution of health care. In view of this moral challenge, Norman Daniels has proposed the ethical framework of Accountability for Reasonableness, which can provide basic guidelines for just health care reforms in Africa. While his approach has been effective in the United States, the theoretical basis has fundamental value differentials from African ideals of justice. Starting from Daniels’ Just Health – Meeting Health Needs Fairly, this PhD study develops an African ethical framework that could inform reforms in African health care systems. Specifically, it establishes four key attributes of the African moral outlook, and three principles of African justice. It further abstracts an African method of ethical analysis: process equilibrium. Against this background, the thesis develops a harmonised framework of just health care. Daniels’ principles are matched with African principles to create a Just Health Theory, which is adapted to the Sub-Saharan Africa context. The resulting African principles are mapped onto the health care sector and finally blended into the Harmonised Framework of Just Health Care. By combining the insights from Daniels with African values and approaches, it is possible that just health care will be attained in Nigeria and beyond.
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The moral philosophy of Bishop ButlerShenk, Jacob Paul January 1962 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University. / The purpose of this study is to provide a critical interpretation of Bishop Butler's moral philosophy. The objective is two-fold, including both exposition and evaluation.
The concept of morality has sometimes been reduced to that of an external demand laid upon the individual, either by God, or by society, or by a sovereign ruler. Of fundamental value in Butler's moral philosophy is the insight that morality rises from the demand of one's own nature. The summons of conscience is a summons to be oneself in the deepest sense, and thus to realize one's true destiny as a human being. Morality thus finds its basis in nature rather than in convention. In this respect Butler sides with Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, and the English rationalists against Hobbes, Mandeville, and Locke. Butler further agrees with the classical Greek and with the rationalist tradition in regarding reality as an ordered whole, with which the structure of man's individual nature is continuous. It is this ontological ground which gives to moral judgment its full cognitive and normative significance [TRUNCATED].
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Non-cognitivism and liberal-individualism : philosophy and ideology in the history of contemporary moral and political lifeCourt, Simon Edward January 1989 (has links)
This thesis is about the character of the non-cognitivist theory of ethics and its practical impact on contemporary moral and political life, It is suggested that non-cognitivism, understood as a distinct style of ethical theorising advanced most notably by Ayer, Stevenson, Hare and Mackie, has both a philosophical character, and an ideological character of a liberal-individualist kind. In the first four chapters the philosophical nature of the non-cognitivist account of ethics is critically examined. In chapters five and six it is argued, following Maclntyre, that there is a need to sketch out the historical context of the emergence of the theory in order to gain a complete understanding of its character. This is undertaken by drawing upon previously unpublished or unavailable material by such thinkers as Duncan-Jones, Barnes and Stevenson. In chapters seven and eight the ideological character of the theory is examined by indicating that philosophy and ideology constitute two logically different forms of understanding. It is suggested that the philosophical arguments advanced within non-cognitivism serve the purpose of giving coherent expression to a presumed ideological liberal-individualist conception of man and his relation to others in the world. Chapters nine and ten considers the implications for contemporary liberal theory of the non-cognitivist dominance of the moral philosophy and political practices of the Western democracies. It is claimed that the attempts of Dunn, Forty and Rawls to justify liberal theory and practice are unsuccessful because non-cognim has effectively undermined the distinction between morality and prudence upon which such a justification is grounded. The conclusion reached is that liberalism is in a state of crisis.
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An anthropological approach to theology : a study of John Hicks theology of religious pluralism, towards ethical criteria for a global theology of religionsMeacock, Heather January 1997 (has links)
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Henry Fielding and the language of morals : an experiment in contextual readingFallon, Roger J. January 1988 (has links)
This historical study attempts a thorough revision of some current assumptions about Fielding's moral 'philosophy'. It endorses the orthodox view that Latitudinarian Anglicanism was a decisive influence, but questions whether the Anglican moralists can usefully be described as exponents of 'benevolism' - their sermons are distinguished most notably by an overriding concern with the inculcation of prudence, and by persistent hortatory appeals to self-interest. 'Prudentialism' is arguably a better term for Latitudinarian ethics, and indeed for that dimension of Fielding's work which is attributable to Anglican influence - above all, the reiterated emphasis on the coincidence of virtue and interest. The Latitudinarian connexion is important. But there were other formative influences, including the 'negative' influence of philosophies with which Fielding disagreed, such as ethical rationalism and psychological egoism. The moral 'philosophy' of Tom Jones is not a rigid conceptual structure: it is a dynamic, and sometimes polemical, response to contemporary ethical debate. This study therefore analyzes Fielding's moral vocabulary by relating it to various other contemporary moral vocabularies. Making constant, detailed reference to chosen contextual sources, it explores Fielding's views on a range of 'live' moral and moral-psychological issues: on the functions of prudence and the grounds of prudential obligation; on the relations between prudential obligation and other moral duties; on benevolence, self-love, and 'disinterestedness'; on the relative status of 'private' and 'public' virtues; on the moral functions of reason and the passions; and on the psychology of moral judgment. This study suggests that Fielding's writings embody a complex and uneasy synthesis of two historically divergent ethical traditions: in his didactic emphasis on interest and his concern with the enlightenment of self-love, Fielding is a literary heir of Anglican prudentialism; in his esteem for the 'heart', he can be seen as an ally of the newer 'sentimental' school of Shaftesbury, Hutcheson and Hume.
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Private virtues, public vices : commercial morality and the novel 1740-1800Bellamy, Elizabeth Clare January 1988 (has links)
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