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For most of the church's history, people have seen Christian ethics as normative and universally applicable. Recently, however, this view has been lost, thanks to naturalism and relativism. R. Scott Smith argues that Christians need to overcome Kant's fact-value dichotomy and recover the possibility of genuine moral and theological knowledge.
For most of the church's history, people have seen Christian ethics as normative and universally applicable. Recently, however, this view has been lost, thanks to naturalism and relativism. R. Scott Smith argues that Christians need to overcome Kant's fact-value dichotomy and recover the possibility of genuine moral and theological knowledge.
R. Scott Smith (Ph.D., University of Southern California) is associate professor of ethics and Christian apologetics at Biola University. He is the author of Virtue Ethics and Moral Knowledge: Philosophy of Language After MacIntyre and Hauerwas(Ashgate, 2003), Truth and the New Kind of Christian(Crossway, 2005) and Naturalism and our Knowledge of Reality (Ashgate, 2012).
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments Introduction Part One: A Short History of Western Ethics 1. Christian, Biblical Ethics 2. Ancient Ethics: Plato and Aristotle on Moral Knowledge 3. Moral Knowledge from Augustine through Aquinas 4. Moral Knowledge in the Reformation and the Enlightenment Shift Part Two: Naturalism, Relativism and Postmodernism: Understanding and Assessing Today?s Dominant Moral Paradigms 5. Options for Naturalistic Ethics 6. Naturalism, Knowledge and the Fact-Value Split 7. More Modern Options: Ethical Relativism, Rawls?s Political Liberalism and Korsgaard?s Constructivism 8. Introduction to the Postmodern Period: A Plurality of Different Voices 9. MacIntyre?s Recovered Thomistic Ethics 10. Hauerwas?s Narrative Christian Ethics 11. Assessing MacIntyre?s and Hauerwas?s Projects Part Three: Toward a Theory of Moral Knowledge 12. Moral Realism and Addressing the Crisis of (Moral) Knowledge 13. Religiously Based Moral Knowledge?and Final Issues Index
Acknowledgments Introduction Part One: A Short History of Western Ethics 1. Christian, Biblical Ethics 2. Ancient Ethics: Plato and Aristotle on Moral Knowledge 3. Moral Knowledge from Augustine through Aquinas 4. Moral Knowledge in the Reformation and the Enlightenment Shift Part Two: Naturalism, Relativism and Postmodernism: Understanding and Assessing Today?s Dominant Moral Paradigms 5. Options for Naturalistic Ethics 6. Naturalism, Knowledge and the Fact-Value Split 7. More Modern Options: Ethical Relativism, Rawls?s Political Liberalism and Korsgaard?s Constructivism 8. Introduction to the Postmodern Period: A Plurality of Different Voices 9. MacIntyre?s Recovered Thomistic Ethics 10. Hauerwas?s Narrative Christian Ethics 11. Assessing MacIntyre?s and Hauerwas?s Projects Part Three: Toward a Theory of Moral Knowledge 12. Moral Realism and Addressing the Crisis of (Moral) Knowledge 13. Religiously Based Moral Knowledge?and Final Issues Index
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