ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2002: Kolnai's later work in moral philosophy is well-known, and interest in it continues to grow, but his dissertation, Ethical Value and Reality, has received little attention - although Kolnai himself said that it contains the germs of nearly all his subsequent thought. This first English translation of the dissertation and of two related papers from the same period will enable the English-speaking reader to explore Kolnai's ethical work as a whole. In Ethical Value and Reality Kolnai proposes a 'completion' of phenomenological value-ethics which takes account of 'the embeddedness of ethical values in reality'. Kolnai explores moral psychology and offers important perspectives on political activity in its moral dimensions, on the relation between morality and religion, and on the relation between the moral point of view and the psycho-therapeutic. Dunlop's comprehensive introduction to the translation provides the reader with assistance in understanding the text, setting it in its contemporary context, and relating it to Kolnai's subsequent writings.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

The Problem of a Completely Valid Ethics and the Limits of Morality

chapter One|16 pages

Ethical Value

chapter Two|26 pages

The Limits of the Ethical End

chapter Three|38 pages

The Gradation of Ethical Value-Emphases

chapter Four|26 pages

Some Criticisms of One-Sided Ethical Approaches

chapter Five|24 pages

Gradation in the Types of Value-Experience

chapter Six|15 pages

Persons and Responsibility

chapter |5 pages

Concluding Remarks

The Possibility of an Ethics Close to Reality

chapter |13 pages

The Structure of Moral Intention