Larry Marquardt

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The specifically modern self, the self that I have called emotivist, finds no limits set to that on which it may pass judgment for such limits could only derive from rational criteria for evaluation and, as we have seen, the emotivist self lacks any such criteria. Everything may be criticized from whatever standpoint the self has adopted, including the self’s choice of standpoint to adopt. It is in this capacity of the self to evade any necessary identification with any particular contingent state of affairs that some modern philosophers, both analytical and existentialist, have seen the ...more
Larry Marquardt
Perhaps the impersonal, universal principles/criteria of emotive morality are to be found in biological survival needs including social interactions
After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory
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