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Single Idea 18225

[filed under theme 22. Metaethics / B. Value / 1. Nature of Value / f. Ultimate value ]

Full Idea

If you can only know what is intrinsically valuable through intuition (as Moore claims), you can still argue about what is unconditionally valuable. There must be something unconditionally valuable because there must be a source of value.

Gist of Idea

If we can't reason about value, we can reason about the unconditional source of value

Source

Christine M. Korsgaard (Aristotle and Kant on the Source of Value [1986], 8 'Three')

Book Ref

Korsgaard,Christine M.: 'Creating the Kingdom of Ends' [CUP 1996], p.228


A Reaction

If you only grasped the values through intuition, does that give you enough information to infer the dependence relations between values?


The 5 ideas from 'Aristotle and Kant on the Source of Value'

Contemplation is final because it is an activity which is not a process [Korsgaard]
For Aristotle, contemplation consists purely of understanding [Korsgaard]
An end can't be an ultimate value just because it is useless! [Korsgaard]
If we can't reason about value, we can reason about the unconditional source of value [Korsgaard]
Goodness is given either by a psychological state, or the attribution of a property [Korsgaard]