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22 J. Value Inquiry 3 (1988)

handle is hein.journals/jrnlvi22 and id is 1 raw text is: The Journal of Value Inquiry 22:3-22 (1988)
©Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Dordrecht - Printed in the Netherlands
Morality and humanity *
VILHJALMUR ARNASON
Department of Philosophy, University of Iceland, IS-101 Reykjavik
Either explicitly or implicitly, philosophers' ideas about human
nature have always been decisive in forming their conceptions of
morality. This is not surprising because the idea of humanity is at
bottom a moral idea in the sense the it delineates the framework
in which the possibilities for human conduct and maturity can be
conceived. Recently there has been a strong tendency among
philosophers to reject traditional ideas about human nature as
misleading and try to describe the features of humanity in con-
cepts and categories that they find more appropriate to the sub-
ject matter. In this paper I consider two of these recent attempts
to formulate an alternative conception of human reality, and pur-
sue their ethical implications. I begin by exploring the contribu-
tion of (the early) Sartre's thought, representing the existentialist
rejection of human nature and radical affirmation of human free-
dom. I then consider the image of man that emerges from Gada-
mer's hermeneutical philosophy and trace the possibilities it opens
for ethical thinking. I try to show that neither of these influential
attempts to correct the misguided images of man in the philo-
sophical tradition can provide an adequate account of human
morality. I propose that for such an account to succeed, philoso-
phy must recover the notion of nature as it enters into the history
of human development.
* This paper was presented at The Fifth Nordic Philosophy Conference, held
in Hanaholmen Culture Centre (outside Helsinki, Finland), 31 August - 2
September, 1984. The theme of the conference was Man in Nature and
Nature in Man.

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