Reason and Sentiment in Hume’s Moral Theory

Dois Pontos 1 (2) (2004)
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Abstract

My main goal in this paper is to vindicate Hume’s belief that morality is exclusively a matter of sentiment, when it is apparent that the reflective or general perspective necessary to making a moral judgment requires reason. My solution to the supposed inconsistency is to show that reason is understood in two ways: in the preliminary understanding, reason is opposed to sentiment; in the final understanding, reason is actually reduced to sentiment, or explained away in favor of it. In this final sense, when reason affects morality, it consists in bringing to the mind imaginary sensations and sentiments to which we react sympathetically.

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original Guimarães, Lívia (2004) "Reason and Sentiment in Hume’s Moral Theory". Doispontos 1(2):

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Lívia Mara Guimarães
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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