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A Theory of the Good: A New Account of the Value of Life, Love, Freedom, Knowledge, Beauty, and the Environment
Contributor(s): Kelly Ph. D., Christopher (Author)
ISBN: 0986123013     ISBN-13: 9780986123016
Publisher: Now Experience Books
OUR PRICE:   $15.55  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: December 2018
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | Aesthetics
Physical Information: 0.63" H x 5.98" W x 9.02" (0.91 lbs) 278 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
"In this remarkable book, Christopher Kelly offers a solution to the fundamental problem in philosophy-the nature of goodness. Philosophers are concerned with other problems-the nature of knowledge, reason, consciousness, happiness, life, beauty, love, and virtue, to name a few-but this is because these things seem good. Nihilists hold the bleak, implausible view that nothing is good. Subjectivists hold that things are good just to the extent that we desire them, while objectivists hold things are good independently of desire. Monists hold only one thing is good, their favorite candidate being pleasure. Pluralists hold that there is more than than one objective good but that nothing sensible can be said about what makes them good. Here Kelly develops a comprehensive theory of the good that is objective, monistic, and non-hedonistic. What makes things intrinsically good, according to Kelly, is a single attribute-richness. Richness can be characterized as the degree of unity in variety, unified complexity, or organic unity. The idea can be traced back to the ancients and resurfaces in the work of Leibniz, Hutcheson, and Nozick amongst others. But before Kelly no one developed this idea into a comprehensive theory of the good, one which explains and unifies a bewildering array of diverse value phenomena. Kelly's theory both lays bare the fundamental nature of goodness and exemplifies it beautifully. It is a tour de force." Graham Oddie, author of Value, Reality, and Desire "Kelly provides the fullest exposition and defense yet of an axiology more accurate than any of its rivals. Through his work and that of a few other recent philosophers, richness theory displaces utilitarian axiology as the truest theory of value. Kelly's A Theory of the Good is clear, compelling, and engaging."Gregory M. Mikkelson, McGill University, environmental ethicist