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Textes Cles de Metaethique

Connaissance Morale, Scepticismes et Realismes

Textes Cles de Metaethique( )
Text by: Ayer, Alfred Jules
Dancy, Jonathan
Foot, Philippa
Frankena, William
Hume, David
Mackie, John L.
McDowell, John
Moore, George Edward
Sidgwick, Henry
Skorupski, John
Editor: Zielinska, Anna C.
Translator: Zielinska, Anna C.
Kervoas, Gael
Narboux, Jean-Philippe
Sharkey, Ronan
Series title:Textes Cles Ser.
ISBN:978-2-7116-2477-5
Publication Date:May 2013
Publisher:Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $18.00
Book Description:

The new discipline of metaethics appeared as an answer to the confusion and uncertainty of moral theories in the 19th Century, by requiring an examination of the epistemological basis of these theories, a rigourous study of the meaning of moral expressions and statements, as well as of the constitutive elements of moral feeling and motivation. In this volume are collected for the first time in French, the key texts that have defined the agenda of contemporary metaethics.

Book Details
Pages:332
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):4.29 x 7.09 Inches
Book Weight:0.77 Pounds
Author Biography
(Text by)
After attending Eton and Oxford University, Sir Alfred Jules Ayer studied philosophy at the University of Vienna, where he affiliated with the Vienna Circle, the school of logical positivism led by Moritz Schlick. On his return to England, he accepted an appointment in 1933 as lecturer at Oxford, and, except for his military service during World War II, he wrote and taught philosophy until his death. During World War II, Ayer was commissioned into the Welsh Guards, and in 1945 was an attache at the British Embassy in Paris. In 1946 he was appointed Grote Professor at the University of London and in 1959 Wykeham Professor of Logic at Oxford.

Ayer's fame was established with the publication of his first book, Language, Truth and Logic, in 1936. This work introduced logical positivism to the English-speaking world in a clear, vigorous, and persuasive style. Building on the thought of Bertrand Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein, Ayer sharpened their theses, boldly revealing the affiliations of logical positivism with traditional British empiricism, particularly the work of David Hume. Ayer claimed that only verifiable statements are true or false. He considered statements of religion or art as merely emotional expressions.

For his contributions to philosophy, Ayer was knighted by the British Crown. He has provided an account of his life, at least of its professional and philosophical sides, in two autobiographies.



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