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Imperial Library
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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: Perception and Moral Knowledge
Chapter 1: Perception: Sensory, Conceptual, and Cognitive Dimensions
I. Major Kinds of Perception
II. The Phenomenology and Content of Perception
III. The Basis of Veridical Perception
Chapter 2: Moral Perception: Causal, Phenomenological, and Epistemological Elements
I. The Perception of Right and Wrong
II. The Representational Character of Moral Perception
Chapter 3: Perception as a Direct Source of Moral Knowledge
I. Perception and Inference
II. Can Moral Perception Be Naturalized?
III. Moral Perception as a Basis of Moral Knowledge
Part Two: Ethical Intuition, Emotional Sensibility, and Moral Judgment
Chapter 4: Perceptual Grounds, Ethical Disagreement, and Moral Intuitions
I. Does Moral Disagreement Undermine Justification in Ethics?
II. The Concept of an Intuition
III. Intuitions as Apprehensions
Chapter 5: Moral Perception, Aesthetic Perception, and Intuitive Judgment
I. The Role of Intuition in Aesthetic Experience
II. Aesthetic and Moral Properties: Comparison and Contrast
III. The Rule-Governed Element in Ethics and Aesthetics
IV. The Reliability of Intuition
Chapter 6: Emotion and Intuition as Sources of Moral Judgment
I. Emotion and Intuition: Interaction and Integration
II. The Evidential Role of Emotion in Moral Matters
Chapter 7: The Place of Emotion and Moral Intuition in Normative Ethics
I. Emotion and Moral Intuition
II. Moral Imagination as a Nexus of Intuition, Emotion, and Perception
III. Intuition and Moral Judgment
Conclusion
Endnotes
Index
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