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Appearances of the Good: An Essay on the Nature of Practical Reason

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'We desire all and only those things we conceive to be good; we avoid what we conceive to be bad.' This slogan was once the standard view of the relationship between desire or motivation and rational evaluation. Many critics have rejected this scholastic formula as either trivial or wrong. It appears to be trivial if we just define the good as 'what we want', and wrong if we consider apparent conflicts between what we seem to want and what we seem to think is good. In Appearances of the Good, Sergio Tenenbaum argues that the old slogan is both significant and right, even in cases of apparent conflict between our desires and our evaluative judgements. Maintaining that the good is the formal end of practical inquiry in much the same way as truth is the formal end of theoretical inquiry, he provides a fully unified account of motivation and evaluation.

Hardcover

First published December 31, 2006

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About the author

Sergio Tenenbaum is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto, Canada.

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109 reviews
June 3, 2010
Answering a bunch of objections to your vague view does not automatically make it plausible. Or worth caring about.
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