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Showing papers by "Isaac Levi published in 1992"


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 1992-Ethics
TL;DR: Dewey as mentioned in this paper argued that moral questions are questions concerning human conduct, for, on his view, the notion of there being a morality consisting of a system of normative principles which are distinctively moral is part and parcel of the severance of morals from human nature he sought to avoid.
Abstract: Thus, John Dewey begins his Human Nature and Conduct. The theme Dewey means to press is familiar enough in his work. Morality seeks to control human nature which resists regulation and so comes to be regarded as a source of evil to be mastered. But given the intractability of human nature, pressure builds to identify some aspect of human nature which is subject to moral control. Dewey writes: "The severance of morals from human nature ends by driving morals inwards from the public open out-of-doors air and light of day into the obscurities and privacies of an inner life. The significance of the traditional discussion of free will is that it reflects precisely a separation of moral activity from nature and the public life of men."2 Dewey sought to draw the contrast between the moral and the nonmoral in a way which avoids "the severance of morals from human nature." He granted that morality is concerned with the regulation of human conduct. Perhaps it would be better to say that Dewey granted that moral questions are questions concerning human conduct, for, on his view, the notion of there being a morality consisting of a system of normative principles which are distinctively moral is part and parcel of the severance of morals from human nature he sought to avoid. Dewey wrote: "Conduct as moral may thus be defined as activity called forth and directed by ideas of value or worth where the values concerned

9 citations