Review: No Morality, No Self, by James Doyle [Book Review]

Ethics 130 (1):102-106 (2019)
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Abstract

James Doyle’s book is provocative and timely. It is an important contribution to the current wave of Anscombe scholarship, and it offers valuable insights into general metaethical ques­tions, such as: In what senses might morality be “unintelligible”? Or: To what extent does a divine law ethics rest on practical reason? Here, I do not want to summarize the many ad­mirable features of Doyle’s book. I will instead focus on his two main theses, of which I re­main unconvinced.

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Katharina Nieswandt
Concordia University

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