Originally published in 1968, this book traces the development of the emotive theory of ethics from its outline by Ogden and Richards in The Meaning of Meaning to the elaborate presentation by Stevenson in Ethics and Language. Attention is paid to the positive features of the ethical theory whilst the author also shows how a more adequate view can be reached through critical reflection on it.
J. O. Urmson was a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
1. Preliminaries 2. The Grounds for Emotivism 3. Emotive Meaning 4, 5 & 6 Stevenson’s Ethics and Language 7. Validity 8. The Vocabulary of Evaluation 9. Good of a Kind and Good From a Point of View 10. A test For Evaluative Terms 11. Meaning and Illocutionary Force 12. Conclusion
J. L. Austin, University of Oxford) Austin, J. L. (late White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, late White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, J. O. Urmson, Marina Sbisà, Marina Sbisa
J. L. Austin, University of Oxford) Austin, J. L. (late White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, late White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, J. I. Austin, J. O. Urmson, G. J. Warnock, Geoffrey J. Warnock, James O. Urmson
John Dillon, J.O. Urmson, Ireland) Dillon, John (Trinity College Dublin, UK) Urmson, Professor J.O. (Late of University of Oxford, Richard Sorabji, J. O. Urmson
J. L. Austin, University of Oxford) Austin, J. L. (late White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, late White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, J. O. Urmson, Marina Sbisà, Marina Sbisa