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	<title>Comments on: Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals</title>
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		<title>By: A. G. Brown</title>
		<link>http://www.futureintarot.com/2009/12/metaphysics-as-a-guide-to-morals/comment-page-1/#comment-459</link>
		<dc:creator>A. G. Brown</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Dec 2009 22:50:25 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Iris Murdoch was appointed to the faculty of Oxford at the age of twenty-nine.  In this book, published in 1992 and based on a series of public, valedictory lectures she was invited to give, she ranges over philosophy, literature, the concept of consciousness, the relationship between religion and morality, and other topics.  She &quot;cuts loose&quot; here, unworried about academic niceties, expressing her unvarnished opinions.  She is marvelously fluent in the western philosophical tradition, addressing Plato, Kant, Schopenhauer, Wittgenstein, Sartre, and Derrida, among others.  Her position, reflecting many years of development, is Platonic in the best, pagan sense: she argues against modern versions of relativism, but also insists that all perception is saturated with value. She is concerned with the future of spirituality in a &quot;demythologized&quot; culture, and draws on Platonism here as well: &quot;God&quot; as a metaphorical representation of Good, Good as the ultimate (secular) source of spiritual nourishment.  The vision is very clear and consistent.  A shorter, earlier exercise is The Sovereignty of Good, and the novels Under the Net and The Nice and the Good address themes discussed more directly here.
Rating: 5 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Iris Murdoch was appointed to the faculty of Oxford at the age of twenty-nine.  In this book, published in 1992 and based on a series of public, valedictory lectures she was invited to give, she ranges over philosophy, literature, the concept of consciousness, the relationship between religion and morality, and other topics.  She &#8220;cuts loose&#8221; here, unworried about academic niceties, expressing her unvarnished opinions.  She is marvelously fluent in the western philosophical tradition, addressing Plato, Kant, Schopenhauer, Wittgenstein, Sartre, and Derrida, among others.  Her position, reflecting many years of development, is Platonic in the best, pagan sense: she argues against modern versions of relativism, but also insists that all perception is saturated with value. She is concerned with the future of spirituality in a &#8220;demythologized&#8221; culture, and draws on Platonism here as well: &#8220;God&#8221; as a metaphorical representation of Good, Good as the ultimate (secular) source of spiritual nourishment.  The vision is very clear and consistent.  A shorter, earlier exercise is The Sovereignty of Good, and the novels Under the Net and The Nice and the Good address themes discussed more directly here.<br />
Rating: 5 / 5</p>
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		<title>By: Timothy Stuhldreher</title>
		<link>http://www.futureintarot.com/2009/12/metaphysics-as-a-guide-to-morals/comment-page-1/#comment-458</link>
		<dc:creator>Timothy Stuhldreher</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Dec 2009 21:19:36 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>This book reminds me a good deal of Walter Kaufmann&#039;s Critique of Religion and Philosophy. In both cases, an extremely well educated person with a literary or scholarly background tries to buttress traditional European  ethical philosophy against what Yeats called the &#039;rough beast... slouching  towards Bethlehem&#039;: i.e., positivism, fascism, existentialism, and all the  rest of the 20th century -isms. Murdoch makes the same turn inward that  Kaufmann does, seeing religion as a valid, real aspect of subjective  experience and, following Kant, insisting on the complete separation and  concomitant autonomy of the phenomenal and moral worlds. She then makes an  essentially Platonic argument for the existence of objective moral  standards.  Most contemporary readers will find the terminology and the  welter of names to be bewildering, to say the least. They may also feel  whirled in circles by the book&#039;s sustained abstraction and insistence on  subjectivity: it&#039;s like watching an otherwise sane woman using scissors to  cut fog. But to my mind, the main problem is the absence of the most  important name of the 19th century: Darwin. Robert Wright&#039;s book The Moral  Animal explains why Darwin trumps Plato once and for all: &quot;read  monkeys for preexistence.&quot;
Rating: 4 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This book reminds me a good deal of Walter Kaufmann&#8217;s Critique of Religion and Philosophy. In both cases, an extremely well educated person with a literary or scholarly background tries to buttress traditional European  ethical philosophy against what Yeats called the &#8216;rough beast&#8230; slouching  towards Bethlehem&#8217;: i.e., positivism, fascism, existentialism, and all the  rest of the 20th century -isms. Murdoch makes the same turn inward that  Kaufmann does, seeing religion as a valid, real aspect of subjective  experience and, following Kant, insisting on the complete separation and  concomitant autonomy of the phenomenal and moral worlds. She then makes an  essentially Platonic argument for the existence of objective moral  standards.  Most contemporary readers will find the terminology and the  welter of names to be bewildering, to say the least. They may also feel  whirled in circles by the book&#8217;s sustained abstraction and insistence on  subjectivity: it&#8217;s like watching an otherwise sane woman using scissors to  cut fog. But to my mind, the main problem is the absence of the most  important name of the 19th century: Darwin. Robert Wright&#8217;s book The Moral  Animal explains why Darwin trumps Plato once and for all: &#8220;read  monkeys for preexistence.&#8221;<br />
Rating: 4 / 5</p>
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