Goodness, God, and Evil

£34.19

Goodness, God, and Evil

Semantics, discourse analysis, stylistics Philosophy of religion

Author: David E. Alexander

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Collection: Continuum Studies in Philosophy of Religion

Language: English

Published by: Continuum

Published on: 24th May 2012

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 168 pages

ISBN: 9781441172303


Most contemporary versions of moral realism are beset with difficulties.

Many of these difficulties arise because of a faulty conception of the nature of goodness. Goodness, God, and Evil lays out and defends a new version of moral realism that re-conceives the nature of goodness.

Alexander argues that the adjective good is best thought of as an attributive adjective and not as a predicative one. In other words, the adjective good logically cannot be detached from the noun (or noun phrase) that it modifies. It is further argued that this conception of the function of the adjective implies that recent attempts to provide necessary a posteriori identities between goodness and something else must fail.

The convertibility of being and goodness, the privation theory of evil, a denial of the fact-value distinction, human nature as the ground of human morality and even a novel argument for the existence of God are some of the implications of the account of goodness that Alexander offers.

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