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No Morality, No Self: Anscombe’s Radical Skepticism

✍ Scribed by James Doyle


Publisher
Harvard UP
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
257
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Frequently cited and just as often disputed, Elizabeth Anscombe’s “Modern Moral Philosophy” (1958) and “The First Person” (1975) are touchstones of twentieth-century analytic philosophy. Though the arguments Anscombe advances in these papers are familiar to philosophers, their significance remains widely misunderstood, says James Doyle.

No Morality, No Self offers a fresh interpretation of Anscombe’s still-controversial theses about ethical reasoning and individual identity, specifically, her argument that the term “moral” (as it occurs in such contexts as “moral obligation”) is literally meaningless, and that “I” does not refer to some special entity called a “self”―a pair of claims that philosophers have responded to with deep skepticism. However unsettling Anscombe’s conclusions may be, Doyle shows the underlying seriousness of the British philosopher’s reasoning, exposing with clarity and concision how the counterarguments of Anscombe’s detractors are based on a flawed or incomplete understanding of her ideas.

Doyle zeroes in on the central conundrum Anscombe posed to the referentialist school: namely, that it is impossible to give a noncircular explanation of how “I” refers to the person who utters it. He shows where the refutations of philosophers including Lucy O’Brien, Gareth Evans, and Ian Rumfitt fall short, and throws light on why “I” developed features that make it look as if it functions as a referring expression. Reconciling seemingly incompatible points of view, Doyle argues that “I” does refer to a self, but not in a way anyone suspected―a surprising conclusion that is entirely à propos of Anscombe’s provocative thought.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Tilte Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Preface
Part One.
No Morality: “Modern Moral Philosophy” (1958)
1.
Virtue Ethics, Eudaimonism, and the Greeks
2.
The Invention of “Morality” and the Possibility of Consequentialism
3.
The Misguided Project of Vindicating Morality
4.
The Futility of Seeking the Extension of a Word with No Intension
5.
What’s Really Wrong with the Vocabulary of Morality?
6.
Assessing “Modern Moral Philosophy”
Part Two.
No Self: “The First Person” (1975)
7.
The Circularity Problem for Accounts of “I” as a Device of Self-Reference
8.
Is the Fundamental Reference Rule for “I” the Key to Explaining First-Person Self-Reference?
9.
Rumfitt’s Solution to the Circularity Problem
10.
Can We Make Sense of a Nonreferential Account of “I”?
11.
Strategies for Saving “I” as a Singular Term: Domesticating FP and Deflating Reference
Epilogue: The Anti-Cartesian Basis of Anscombe’s Skepticism
Appendix A.
Aquinas and Natural Law
Appendix B. Stoic Ethics: A Law Conception without Commandments?
Notes
References
Acknowledgments
Index


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