306 Pages
    by Routledge

    306 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is Volume III in a series of twelve in a collection on Ethics. Originally published in 1930. The rise, progress, and decline of a theory of moral philosophy which prevailed in this country for the greater part of the eighteenth century. Founded by Shaftesbury, and built up by Hutcheson, it derived our moral perceptions from a special Moral Sense, interpreted on the analogy of the Five Bodily Senses. The book attempts an account of those two leaders, and of their principal followers and critics. The followers include the doubtful supporter David Hume; the critics Adam Smith and Immanuel Kant.

    1 Shaftesbury 2 Critics of Shaftesbury 3 Hutcheson: 'Inquiry' 1725 4 Hutcheson: 'The Passions' 1728 5 Hutcheson: 'The System' 1755 6 Minor Critics of the Theory 7 Hume: 'Human Nature' 8 Hume: 'Principles of Morals' 9 Adam Smith: His Theory 10 Adam Smith: Historian and Critic 11 Adam Smith: Under Criticism with Hutcheson 12 Kant on the Moral Sense

    Biography

    James Bonar