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4 - Moral obligation, duty and freedom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2012

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Summary

REASON, ART AND MORAL OBLIGATION

Let us suppose that [a science of moral facts] has been perfected. Our ascendancy is culminated: we are masters of the moral order. It is no longer external to us, since from this point on we conceive of it in terms of a system of clear and distinct ideas whose relationships we understand. Now we are in a position to ascertain the extent to which the moral order is founded in the nature of things – that is, in the nature of society – which is to say to what extent it is what it ought to be. In the degree that we see it as such, we can freely consent to it. For to wish that it be other than is implied by the natural make-up of the reality that it expresses would be to talk nonsense under the pretext of free will. We can also see to what extent it is not based on the order of things, for it is always possible that it may involve abnormal elements. But then we should have available, thanks to the same science we are supposing to be established, the means of restoring it to a normal state. Thus, on condition of having adequate knowledge of moral precepts, of their causes and of their functions, we are in a position to conform to them, but consciously and knowing why. Conformity which has thus been assented to is no longer a constraint.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1972

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