Abstract
“Marxists,” Eugene Kamenka has written, “have failed to develop an original or comparatively coherent view of ethics that can be ranked as a type of ethical theory finding its natural place beside utilitarian ethics, ethical intuitionism, existentialist ethics, or even Greek ethics.” This judgment, that Marxism has no theory of ethics or no coherent one or that if it does have a coherent theory that theory is just a version of some type of ethical theory that is independent of Marxism, seems supported by various recent philosophical discussions of Marx or Marxism and morality. Thus, Marx himself has been taken to be everything from a moral skeptic or relativist to an ethical intuitionist to a utilitarian to a proponent of a quasi-Aristotelian morality based on a notion of the function of man.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. Utility;Socialism as the Development of Liberalism;2022
2. Karl Marx: Founding Father of Workers' Self-Governance?;Economic and Industrial Democracy;1987-08
3. On The Possibility Of Marx'S Moral Critique Of Capitalism;Review of Social Economy;1986-10