Publication | Closed Access
Beyond Self and Other
25
Citations
14
References
1997
Year
Moral ReasoningBernard WilliamsMoral PhilosophyValue TheoryMoral IssueAutonomyRelationship EthicsPsychologySocial SciencesPersonal IdentityEthics Of LoveSocial IdentitySelf-awarenessLegal EthicsApplied Social PsychologyCollective SelfMoral PsychologyCultureIndividual ResponsibilityMoral PracticeMoral NormsNormative EthicRadical RiftValue VirtuePhilosophy Of Mind
Today there is a tendency to do ethics on the basis of what I should like to call the “self-other model.” On this view, an action has no moral worth unless it benefits others–and not even then, unless it is motivated by altruism rather than selfishness. This radical rift between self-interest and virtue traces back at least to Philo of Alexandria (c. 20 b.c. –50 a.d. ), according to whom, “lovers of self, when they have stripped and prepared for conflict with those who value virtue, keep up the boxing and wrestling until they have either forced their opponents to give in, or have completely destroyed them.” More recently, the distinction between those who value themselves and those who “value virtue” has been drawn sharply by Bernard Williams: “[I]n moral theory … it is not the Kantian leap from the particular and the affective to the rational and universal that makes all the difference; it is rather the Humean step–that is to say, the first Humean step–from the self to someone else.”
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