EugAne Duprel on the Ethical Idealism of Socrates
Keywords:
socrates, dupréel, ethical, metaphysical, unconditional, ethical idealism
Abstract
In contemporary researches on Ethics the study subject of this discipline seems to be simple and is considered as being a sociological given fact From this perspective the subject of Ethics is provided by the external experience the observation of the social world and of the rules of conduct including the ones pertaining to certain professional fields which are actually followed or just proclaimed verbally as well as by the internal experience our own sense regarding the idea of good and acceptance of the moral rules However this way of perceiving things has an important shortcoming it cannot explain an ethical conduct which is defining for the human being the heroic conduct There are people with strong characters who in the name of some ethical ideals make choices that do not pursue personal interests On the contrary the choices can prejudice them greatly and even putting their own lives in danger We are talking about choices that are not conditioned internally or externally neither socially or by personal emotions but are ethical imperatives that refer to unconditional and unrelated values to the definite and absolute Our present endeavor seeks to highlight how the manifestation of the Unconditional occurs in the case of exemplary ethical personality of antiquity and how the Unconditional reveals itself as being a divine imperative a metaphysical principle
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Published
2014-03-15
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