ABOUT THIS BOOKGeorge Edward Moore is among this century's most influential philosophers. Perhaps best known for his "defense of common sense," he also made important contributions to metaphysics and theory of knowledge. But it is in ethics, and especially owing to the positions he develops in his Principia Ethica, first published in 1903, that his ideas have had their most enduring influence.A forerunner to this famous work, The Elements of Ethics is a series of ten unpublished lectures that were presented by Moore, then in his mid-twenties. The Elements shows that Principia Ethica did not spring fully-formed from Moore's pen but evolved slowly over time. In these lectures, Moore begins with the same question he asks in Principia Ethica: What is Good? Importantly, his answer is the same one he offers in Principia and many of its supporting arguments also appear, though sometimes in embryonic form. Moreover, in these lectures we also find sustained critiques of those who commit the "naturalistic fallacy," and of John Stuart Mill's commission of it in particular.In The Elements, however, Moore's position regarding ethics in relation to conduct differs in important respects from the one presented in Principia, and the former work contains important discussions, ranging from Christian ethics and the possibility of free will, not found in the latter.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHYTom Regan is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at North Carolina State University. Among his many books are Bloomsbury's Prophet: G. E. Moore and the Development of His Moral Philosophy (Temple) and, most recently, The Animal Rights Debate (with Carl Cohen).
REVIEWS"An important publication for philosophers specializing in twentieth-century philosophy or moral philosophy."—Library Journal
"Scholars of Moore's philosophy will be grateful to Tom Regan for producing this volume."—Ethics
"...indispensable for anyone who wishes to understand Moore's personal and philosophical developments. Regan enables us to see Moore working his way through positions we did not know he had considered so carefully, and thereby to obtain an enriched sense of what Moore is doing in Principia Ethica."—International Studies in Philosophy
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