Abstract
Some interpret Reid's notion of a moral sense as merely analogical. Others understand it as a species of acquired perception. To understand Reid's account of the moral sense, we must draw from his theory of perception and his theory of aesthetic experience, each of which illuminate the nature and operation of the moral faculty. I argue that, on Reid's view, the moral faculty is neither affective nor rational, but representational. It is a discrete, basic, capacity for representing the real moral properties of humans and human conduct.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. Revisiting Reid on Religion;Journal of Scottish Philosophy;2021-09
2. Reid on Language and the Culture of Mind;Australasian Journal of Philosophy;2020-04-23
3. Revisiting the Early Modern Philosophical Canon;Journal of the American Philosophical Association;2016