A wide ranging consideration of the work of contemporary ethicist David Wong.

Original, influential, and often controversial, ethicist David Wong defends forms of moral relativism. His 1984 Moral Relativity was a study of this concept, and his 2006 Natural Moralities presented a new and sophisticated account of it. Wong's vision is of a pluralistic moral relativism; he does not defend all forms of relativism but evaluates what moralities may be true. His singular philosophy reflects his deep knowledge of Confucian and Daoist thought.

In this book, moral philosophers and scholars of Chinese thought debate ideas central to Wong's work and Wong responds to them. The discussion ranges widely, including exploring Wong's thought on naturalism, criteria for moralities, the principle of charity, moral authority, and the concept of community, and looking at his readings of Xunzi and Zhuangzi. Wong's nuanced and forceful responses clarify and develop further arguments in his work. These engaging and critical exchanges between Wong and his critics illuminate not only Wong's thought, but also contemporary ethical theory and Chinese philosophy.

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Preface

1. Introduction
Yong Huang and Yang Xiao

Part I: Critical Essays

2. Human Morality, Naturalism, and Accommodation
Lawrence Blum

3. Naturalism and Pluralistic Relativism
Steven F. Geisz and Brook J. Sadler

4. Principle of Humanity vs. Principle of Charity
Chad Hansen

5. Naturalism, Relativism, and the Authority of Morality
Christopher W. Gowans

6. The Metaphysics and Semantics of Moral Relativism
Paul Bloomfield and Daniel Massey

7. Toward a Benign Moral Relativism: From Agent/Appraiser-Centered to the Patient-Centered
Yong Huang

Part II: David Wong's Responses to Critics

8. Response to Blum

9. Response to Geisz and Sadler

10. Response to Hansen

11. Response to Gowans

12. Response to Bloomfield and Massey

13. Response to Huang

Contributors
Index

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A wide ranging consideration of the work of contemporary ethicist David Wong.

Product details

ISBN
9781438450957
Published
2014-03-01
Publisher
State University of New York Press; State University of New York Press
Weight
590 gr
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
293

Biographical note

Yang Xiao is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Kenyon College. Yong Huang is Professor of Philosophy at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is the author of Religious Goodness and Political Rightness: Beyond the Liberal-Communitarian Debate and Confucius: A Guide for the Perplexed and editor of Rorty, Pragmatism, and Confucianism: With Responses by Richard Rorty, also published by SUNY Press.