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  1. 27 de mai. de 2024 · Henry Sidgwick was an English philosopher and author remembered for his forthright ethical theory based on Utilitarianism and his Methods of Ethics (1874), considered by some critics as the most significant ethical work in English in the 19th century.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. According to Thomas Hurka, in "Mistake" Prichard was not reporting a radically new view, but something like the consensus of British moral philosophers at the time. Henry Sidgwick, Edgar Frederick Carritt, G. E. Moore, and A. C. Ewing all basically concurred in their own writings. They believed that there was one basic, unqualified sense of ...

  3. Há 4 dias · The tradition of modern utilitarianism began with Jeremy Bentham, and continued with such philosophers as John Stuart Mill, Henry Sidgwick, R. M. Hare, and Peter Singer.

  4. 28 de mai. de 2024 · Starting with a four-page commentary on After Virtue, the piece aimed to acquit Kant, among other things, from MacIntyre’s charge of formalism (that is, the idea that Kant merely offers a formal theory of ethics, without substantive moral implications).

  5. 24 de mai. de 2024 · Instead of the global universal maximization principle of classical utilitarianism that Henry Sidgwick called “the point of view of the universe,” John Dewey viewed welfare as guided by a local, problem oriented, agonistic preference adjustment principle.

  6. 10 de jun. de 2024 · Henry Sidgwick’s name leaps to mind at once. The son of a clergyman-schoolmaster, he was connected by marriage to a Scottish gentry family (the Balfours) and the scientific aristocracy (Lord Rayleigh).

  7. 25 de mai. de 2024 · "Sidgwick, Henry" published on by Oxford University Press. (1838–1900),professor of moral philosophy at Cambridge from 1883. A follower in economics and politics of J.