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New Literary History | 1983

Modernism and the Emancipation of Literature from Morality: Teleology and Vocation in Joyce, Ford, and Proust

David Sidorsky

T HE GOAL of the emancipation of art from the constraints and the burden of demonstrating a moral truth or of bearing a moral message is stated in the novels of early modernism and is found in the discussion of the literary theory and practice of the modernist movement. This goal is often evidenced in the novelists choice of subject matter, by his concern with the formal aspects of the work, or in his attitude to the appropriateness of moral claims in art.


Social Philosophy & Policy | 1987

Moral Pluralism and Philanthropy

David Sidorsky

The idea of moral pluralism generates a dilemma for the practice of philanthropy. Characteristically, the practice of philanthropy assumes unity, coherence, or convergence among the diverse virtues and moral aims that it pursues. In the philanthropic tradition, it is recognized that the goals of a particular philanthropy will vary. Yet, if these are sincere expressions of the philanthropic will, each represents some portion of the manifold activity of “doing good” according to particularized choice or style. The relevant analogy should be drawn to the slogan of “giving to the college of your choice” or to worship of the one god in your own way, where the plurality of expression is not only consistent with the residual value of education or of religion, but articulates the pragmatic way to realize the underlying values of a pluralistic society. Historically, this reflects the place of a unifying religious vision of the nature of the good or of a secular conception of a public philosophy which recognized the common good. Even etymologically, the love of mankind suggests a single passion that is directed beneficently to the shared values of mankind. The theory and practice of contemporary philanthropy is necessarily pluralistic, however, and it reflects the range of decisions by individuals with different interests and values in a pluralist, democratic society. The legitimized and recognized range of philanthropies in modern societies demonstrates divergent and even conflicting perceptions of the common good or the public interest. Thus, the range of philanthropies includes support for bird watching and for business opportunities of minorities, which may require some decisions on “comparable worth” and competitive allocation of resources.


Social Philosophy & Policy | 2001

Incomplete Routes to Moral Objectivity: Four Variants of Naturalism

David Sidorsky

The search for moral objectivity has been constant throughout the history of philosophy, although interpretations of the nature and scope of objectivity have varied. One aim of the pursuit of moral objectivity has been the demonstration of what may be termed its epistemological thesis , that is, the claim that the truth of assertions of the goodness or rightness of moral acts is as legitimate, reliable, or valid as the truth of assertions involving other forms of human knowledge, such as common sense, practical expertise, science, or mathematics. Another aim of the quest for moral objectivity may be termed its pragmatic formulation ; this refers to the development of a method or procedure that will mediate among conflicting moral views in order to realize a convergence or justified agreement about warranted or true moral conclusions. In the ethical theories of Aristotle, David Hume, and John Dewey, theories that represent three of the four variants of ethical naturalism (defined below) that are surveyed in this essay, the epistemological thesis and the pragmatic formulation are integrated or combined. The distinction between these two elements is significant for the present essay, however, since I want to show that linguistic naturalism, the fourth variant I shall examine, has provided a demonstration of the epistemological thesis about moral knowledge, even if the pragmatic formulation has not been successfully realized.


Archive | 1977

John Dewey: The Essential Writings

John Dewey; David Sidorsky


Archive | 1971

The liberal tradition in European thought.

David Sidorsky


Archive | 2008

The Later Works of John Dewey, Volume 3, 1925 - 1953: 1927-1928, Essays, Reviews, Miscellany, and "Impressions of Soviet Russia"

John Dewey; David Sidorsky


New Literary History | 2007

The Uses of the Philosophy of G. E. Moore in the Works of E. M. Forster

David Sidorsky


Archive | 2016

An Interpretation of American Conservative Thought: Political Issues, Conceptual Differences, and Attitudinal Disjunctions

David Sidorsky


Social Philosophy & Policy | 1983

Contextualism, Pluralism, and Distributive Justice

David Sidorsky


Archive | 2013

Monistic Ideals, Plural Values, and the Limits of Philosophy

David Sidorsky

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