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II. Human Flourishing

On the Scope of Moral Inquiry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

H. Meynell
Affiliation:
Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Leeds

Extract

Miss G. E. M. Anscombe has said that, in order for progress to be made in ethics, we must have some determinate idea of ‘human flourishing.’ I want to cite in what follows the work of a number of writers in the psychiatric field who seem to me to throw light on just what it is for a human individual to flourish, for a human community to flourish, and for a human individual to flourish in relation to or in spite of his community.

Type
Section I: Christian Philosophy and Ethics
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1969

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References

page 147 note 1 Philosophy, 1958.Google Scholar

page 148 note 1 The classical exposition of the argument is Moore's, G. E.Principia Ethica.Google Scholar

page 150 note 1 Wittgenstein, , Philosophical Investigations, I, 6671.Google Scholar

page 151 note 1 Heimler, E., Mental Illness and Social Work, pp. 122–3.Google Scholar

page 151 note 2 Heimler, , op. cit., pp. 125–6.Google Scholar

page 151 note 3 Ibid., p. 124.

page 152 note 1 Laing, , The Divided Self, p. 27.Google Scholar

page 152 note 2 Laing, , PE, p. 57.Google Scholar

page 152 note 3 Ibid., p. 24.

page 152 note 4 Ibid., pp. 28–9.

page 152 note 1 Heimler, , op. cit., p. 126.Google Scholar

page 152 note 2 The Michelson-Morley experiment, a foundation-stone of contemporary physics and cosmology, has several times come out ‘wrong’.

page 152 note 3 This seems to have been the root of the persecution that afflicted Galileo.

page 152 note 4 A searching examination of this assumption in contemporary studies of behaviour is Charles Taylor's The Explanation of Behaviour.

page 152 note 5 Peter, Hays, New Horizons in Psychiatry, p. 175.Google Scholar