A copy of this work was available on the public web and has been preserved in the Wayback Machine. The capture dates from 2018; you can also visit the original URL.
The file type is application/pdf
.
Amenable to Reason: Aristotle's Rhetoric and the Moral Psychology of Practical Ethics
2000
Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
An Aristotelian conception of practical ethics can be derived from the account of practical reasoning that Aristotle articulates in his Rhetoric and this has important implications for the way we understand the nature and limits of practical ethics. An important feature of this conception of practical ethics is its responsiveness to the complex ways in which agents form and maintain moral commitments, and this has important implications for the debate concerning methods of ethics in applied
doi:10.1353/ken.2000.0028
fatcat:ftdp52zr3rh7dhkzlzpsl6pe2y