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The ethical primateThe ethical primate

The ethical primate1994

Mary Midgley

About this book

In her new book, Mary Midgley argues that the unrealistic isolation of mind and body in reductive scientific ideologies still causes painful confusion. Such ideologies present crude pictures which are not good science, since they ignore the manifest importance of the higher human faculties. Neither inside nor outside these crude pictures is there room for any realistic notion of the self. Why should these theories insist on only one kind of answer? There is not just one single legitimate explanation. There are as many answers as there are viewpoints from which questions arise - subjective and objective, practical as well as theoretical. Human morality arises out of human freedom: we are uniquely free beings in that we are aware of our conflicts of motive. But those conflicts and our capacity to resolve them are part of our natural inheritance. Although our selves are in many ways divided, we share the difficult project of wholeness with other organisms. What matters for our freedom is the recognition of our genuine agency, our slight but nevertheless real power to grasp and arbitrate our inner conflicts.

Details

First published
1994
OL Work ID
OL2940410W

Subjects

EthicsFree will and determinismHuman beingsHuman evolutionMoral and ethical aspectsMoral and ethical aspects of Human evolutionPersonal AutonomyLibre arbitre et déterminismeHommeÉvolutionAspect moralMoraleHomo sapiens (species)Ethics (philosophy)PHILOSOPHYSocialEthics & Moral PhilosophyEtica

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.