Practical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human action

The dissertation is an examination of obligation, which I argue is a mode of rational necessity that is proper to human agency. I begin from G. E. M. Anscombe’s celebrated attack against modern moral philosophy, and then sketch a positive theory of obligation as it figures in morality and in law, d...

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Main Author: O'Brien, Matthew Bennett
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3257
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-05-32572015-09-20T16:59:54ZPractical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human actionO'Brien, Matthew BennettObligationVirtue ethicsLawElizabeth AnscombeThomas AquinasAristotleDouble effectIntentionPractical reasonAristotelian ethicsPractical knowledgeThe dissertation is an examination of obligation, which I argue is a mode of rational necessity that is proper to human agency. I begin from G. E. M. Anscombe’s celebrated attack against modern moral philosophy, and then sketch a positive theory of obligation as it figures in morality and in law, drawing upon the work of Aquinas and Aristotle. The first chapter explicates this idea of “practical necessity” and the second chapter shows that Aristotelian ethics, because it is not a theological law conception of ethics, has no place for a peculiarly moral conception of obligation. The third chapter examines Aquinas’s conception of moral law and argues that Aquinas vindicates Anscombe’s negative critique of the “moral ought.” The fourth chapter shows that the application of exceptionless moral norms (i.e. moral absolutes), which is one kind of obligation, requires attention to aspects of social practices. Attention to social practices allows the resolution of controverted problems about specifying intentions and applying the principle of double effect in a way that makes exceptionless moral norms workable. The fifth and final chapter defends the conception of intentional action assumed in the fourth chapter, and demonstrates that the scholastic ‘sub specie boni’ thesis is an integral part of action explanation, as well as Anscombe’s notion of “practical knowledge”. The upshot of the dissertation is an integrated investigation into how the ideas of good and necessity figure in ethics, law, and human action.text2011-06-10T15:44:24Z2011-06-10T15:45:00Z2011-06-10T15:44:24Z2011-06-10T15:45:00Z2011-052011-06-10May 20112011-06-10T15:45:00Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3257eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Obligation
Virtue ethics
Law
Elizabeth Anscombe
Thomas Aquinas
Aristotle
Double effect
Intention
Practical reason
Aristotelian ethics
Practical knowledge
spellingShingle Obligation
Virtue ethics
Law
Elizabeth Anscombe
Thomas Aquinas
Aristotle
Double effect
Intention
Practical reason
Aristotelian ethics
Practical knowledge
O'Brien, Matthew Bennett
Practical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human action
description The dissertation is an examination of obligation, which I argue is a mode of rational necessity that is proper to human agency. I begin from G. E. M. Anscombe’s celebrated attack against modern moral philosophy, and then sketch a positive theory of obligation as it figures in morality and in law, drawing upon the work of Aquinas and Aristotle. The first chapter explicates this idea of “practical necessity” and the second chapter shows that Aristotelian ethics, because it is not a theological law conception of ethics, has no place for a peculiarly moral conception of obligation. The third chapter examines Aquinas’s conception of moral law and argues that Aquinas vindicates Anscombe’s negative critique of the “moral ought.” The fourth chapter shows that the application of exceptionless moral norms (i.e. moral absolutes), which is one kind of obligation, requires attention to aspects of social practices. Attention to social practices allows the resolution of controverted problems about specifying intentions and applying the principle of double effect in a way that makes exceptionless moral norms workable. The fifth and final chapter defends the conception of intentional action assumed in the fourth chapter, and demonstrates that the scholastic ‘sub specie boni’ thesis is an integral part of action explanation, as well as Anscombe’s notion of “practical knowledge”. The upshot of the dissertation is an integrated investigation into how the ideas of good and necessity figure in ethics, law, and human action. === text
author O'Brien, Matthew Bennett
author_facet O'Brien, Matthew Bennett
author_sort O'Brien, Matthew Bennett
title Practical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human action
title_short Practical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human action
title_full Practical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human action
title_fullStr Practical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human action
title_full_unstemmed Practical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human action
title_sort practical necessity : a study in ethics, law, and human action
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3257
work_keys_str_mv AT obrienmatthewbennett practicalnecessityastudyinethicslawandhumanaction
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