Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2015

Keywords

Iris Murdoch, metaphysics, ethical realism, the moral good, human flourishing

Abstract

Even a scant acquaintance with current cultural and philosophical trends will readily point to a widespread predilection for subjectivist forms of moral reasoning. By “subjectivist” I refer to various non-cognitivist and constructionist paradigms in moral philosophy and popular parlance that reduce ethical statements to expressions of individual or collective preferences, feelings, or prejudices stripped of any object-given normativity. Th e following are but some of the factors that fuel such perspectives: the proverbial fact/value dichotomy and anti-realist sentiments pervading large swaths of analytic philosophy; poststructuralist and postcolonial “genealogies” that tie the language of universal morality to discourses of power, patriarchy, and totalitarian agency; and the utilization of the language of virtues, values, and “moral clarity” for a specifi c set of domestic and foreign policy commitments. Such intellectual positions, accordingly, result in a double remove of ethics: from the structure of reality on the hand and from human existence and accounts of human fl ourishing on the other. In order to interrogate these issues at a greater length, I will briefl y turn to Iris Murdoch’s moral philosophy in order to examine how her specifi c form of ethical realism addresses such claims about ethics. Despite some reservations about the cogency of her approach, I will argue that her basic intuition to connect morality with the wider realm of meaning and accounts of human fl ourishing is indispensable for any theological account of the humanization of life.

Journal Title

Biblijski Pogledi

Volume

21

First Page

101

Last Page

114

First Department

Theology and Christian Philosophy

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