Rozdział w monografii
Brak miniatury
Licencja

ClosedAccessDostęp zamknięty
 

Confidence: On the Possibility of Ethical Knowledge

Uproszczony widok
dc.abstract.enThe claim that confidence can be an alternative to ethical knowledge is widely considered to be a rare miss among many hits in Bernard Williams’s Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy. If we understand confidence as the psychological manifestation of conviction, Williams’s critique of ethical cognitivism leaves almost no grounds for being reasonably confident in one’s moral outlook. But it is not the only way we can understand it. The author proposes a model of practical deliberation within which confidence makes sense, suggesting that, by championing confidence rather than conviction, Williams argues implicitly for an unorthodox approach to action, one in which the agent is construed as essentially dependent, in her identity and in her capacity for continued action, on the outcomes of her own decisions. The author argues that such an agent is necessarily committed, on the one hand, to identifying strongly with the preconceptions of her own community and, on the other, to take into account the beliefs, including moral beliefs, of other people. The author suggests that the capacity to continuously enlarge one’s moral outlook in this way is what Williams means by ethical confidence. The author also examines the extent to which his position can be understood as a form of anti-intellectualist moral cognitivism.
dc.affiliationUniwersytet Warszawski
dc.contributor.authorŁukomska, Agata
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-28T20:09:08Z
dc.date.available2024-01-28T20:09:08Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.description.financeNie dotyczy
dc.identifier.doi10.1093/OSO/9780197626566.003.0006
dc.identifier.urihttps://repozytorium.uw.edu.pl//handle/item/151552
dc.identifier.weblinkhttps://academic.oup.com/book/43880/chapter-abstract/370037904?redirectedFrom=fulltext&login=false
dc.languageeng
dc.pbn.affiliationphilosophy
dc.publisher.ministerialOxford University Press
dc.relation.bookMorality and Agency : Themes from Bernard Williams
dc.relation.pages110–C5.P89
dc.rightsClosedAccess
dc.sciencecloudnosend
dc.titleConfidence: On the Possibility of Ethical Knowledge
dc.typeMonographChapter
dspace.entity.typePublication