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  1. Intention and Mental Causation.Rémi Clot-Goudard - forthcoming - Foundations of Science.
    Many philosophers nowadays take for granted a causalist view of action explanation, according to which intentional action is a movement caused by mental antecedents. For them, “the possibility of human agency evidently requires that our mental states – our beliefs, desires, and intentions – have causal effects in the physical world: in voluntary actions our beliefs and desires, or intentions and decisions, must somehow cause our limbs to move in appropriate ways” (Jaegwon Kim, Mind in a Physical World, Cambridge (MA), (...)
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  2. Good Reasons for Acting: Towards Human Flourishing.Giulia Codognato - forthcoming - Argumenta.
    The aim of this paper is to show that if and only if agents are motivated to act by good reasons for acting, they flourish, since, in so doing, they consciously act in accordance with their nature through virtuous actions. I offer an account of what good reasons for acting consist of reconsidering Aquinas’ natural inclinations. Based on a critical analysis of Anjum and Mumford’s work on dispositions in analytic metaphysics, I argue, contra Hume’s law, that Aquinas’ natural inclinations show (...)
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  3. On Practical Knowledge, Observation, and Whether Action Has Its Own Kind of Sight.Matt Dougherty - forthcoming - In Yannic Kappes, Asya Passinsky, Julio De Rizzo & Benjamin Schnieder, Facets of Reality. Berlin: De Gruyter.
    Elizabeth Anscombe and Gilbert Ryle both hold that the knowledge we have of what we are intentionally doing is non-observational – denying, in Anscombe’s terms, that there is any ‘strange kind of seeing eye in the middle of action’. This paper argues that the narrowness of their notions of ‘observation’ plausibly allows for the possibility that action, despite being non-observational, has its own kind of sight – thus strictly allowing that practical knowledge is non-observational while also admitting a kind of (...)
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  4. Two Guises of the Good in Anscombe.Ulf Hlobil - forthcoming - Journal of Value Inquiry:1-10.
    The paper distinguishes two versions of the guise of the good in Anscombe’s Intention and raises some doubts about Francesco Orsi’s recent proposal for how these two versions hang together. While Orsi’s interpretation of the two versions are separately insightful and illuminating, Orsi’s “Anscombean argument” for connecting Anscombe’s two versions of the guise of the good is at odds with Anscombe’s own approach.
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  5. Anscombe, Anarchism, and Authority.Anne Jeffrey - forthcoming - Ergo.
    Philosophical anarchism, in its strongest form, says that a right to be obeyed would run up against the duty to act autonomously, so there must be no one with a right to be obeyed. More recently, a parallel criticism of moral testimony has been advanced according to which there can be no right to be believed about moral matters because it would lead us to fail in our duty to form our moral beliefs for ourselves, and thus to bear responsibility (...)
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  6. Being and Becoming Good: On the Diversity of Human Goodness and Virtue.Anne Jeffrey - forthcoming - Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    Aristotelian Naturalism is an ethics on which moral goodness is a species of natural goodness—the kind of goodness we find on display in other creatures whose habits and activities enable them to thrive. What it takes for humans to be good is to have habits and engage in activities that contribute to human flourishing. The primary aim of the book is to present a version of Aristotelian Naturalism enriched by empirical evidence and responsive to criticisms from feminist and disability ethics. (...)
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  7. Sharing non-observational knowledge.Guy Longworth - forthcoming - Tandf: Inquiry:1-21.
  8. Benjamin J.B. Lipscomb, The Women Are up to Something. How Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley, and Iris Murdoch Revolutionized Ethics.Gustavo Ortiz Millán - forthcoming - Critica:99-107.
    Benjamin J.B. Lipscomb, The Women Are up to Something. How Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley, and Iris Murdoch Revolutionized Ethics, Oxford University Press, New York, 2022, 326pp., ISBN 978–0–19–754107–4.
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  9. Reading Rödl: On Self-Consciousness and Objectivity, edited by James F. Conant and Jesse M. Mulder. [REVIEW]John Schwenkler - forthcoming - Mind.
    In his 2007 book, /Self-Consciousness/, Sebastian Rödl presents his topic—that of first-person thought—as ‘a manner of thinking of an object, or a form of reference’ to a particular thing. A decade later, in /Self-Consciousness and Objectivity: An Introduction to Absolute Idealism/, Rödl rejects what he now calls the ‘lingering naturalism’ of that earlier work, which he roots in the ‘dogmatic presupposition’ that ‘I’ is a word that makes reference. The volume under review comprises seventeen critical essays on /Self-Consciousness and Objectivity/, (...)
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  10. Rules, Rights, and Hedges.John Schwenkler & Marshall Bierson - forthcoming - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy.
    One is sometimes, but only sometimes, justified in pursuing a suboptimal course of action due to a concern that, in attempting the ideal course, one might fail to follow through and so make the situation even worse. This paper explains why such hedging is sometimes justified and sometimes not. -/- The explanation we offer relies on Elizabeth Anscombe’s distinction between reasons and logoi. Reasons are normative considerations that identify something good or bad that an act will secure or avoid, while (...)
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  11. The Women Are Up To Something: How Elisabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgeley, and Iris Murdoch Revolutionized Ethics. By BENJAMIN J. B. LIPSCOMB. [REVIEW]Peter West - forthcoming - The Philosophical Quarterly.
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  12. Interpersonal Reasoning: A Philosophical Psychology of Testimonial Trust.Berislav Marušić - 2025 - European Journal of Philosophy 33 (2):531-549.
    Anscombe famously said, “It is an insult and it may be an injury not to be believed.” But what is it to believe someone? My aim is to show that understanding what it is to believe someone requires a conception of a distinctive kind of interpersonal reasoning. To do so, I develop an analogy between interpersonal reasoning and an Anscombean conception of practical reasoning. I suggest that the distinctive ‘form’ of interpersonal reasoning is recognition. I furthermore argue that this is (...)
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  13. No Self‐Reference, No Ownership?Bernhard Ritter - 2025 - European Journal of Philosophy 33 (2):475-492.
    A ‘no-ownership’ or ‘no-self theory’ holds that there is no proper subject of experience; the ownership of experience can only be accounted for by invoking a sub-personal entity. In the recent self-versus-no-self debate, it is widely assumed that the no-referent view of ‘I’, which is closely associated with Wittgenstein and G. E. M. Anscombe, implies a no-ownership theory of experience. I spell out this assumption with regard to both non-reflective and reflective consciousness and show that it is false. If the (...)
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  14. How to Contradict an Expression of Intention.John Schwenkler - 2025 - In Christopher Frey & Jennifer A. Frey, Practical truth: historical and contemporary perspectives. New York, NY: pp. 122-137.
    This chapter interprets G. E. M. Anscombe’s discussion in §31 of Intention of the relationship between expressions of intention and descriptions of matters of fact. For Anscombe, a statement like “I’m raising my arm” or “I’m going to get up at 7:00”, which expresses an intention by saying what is happening or is going to happen, is contradicted only by an opposing command or the expression of an opposing intention. I first challenge an interpretation of this passage as claiming that (...)
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  15. Practical Truth and Conformity to Appetite: What the Medieval Philosophers Can Teach Us.Osborne Thomas M. - 2025 - In Christopher Frey & Jennifer A. Frey, Practical truth: historical and contemporary perspectives. New York, NY: pp. 123-139.
    The question of whether there is a distinct kind of practical truth has its source in Aristotle's claim that "[I]n the case of thought that is theoretical, and not practical nor productive, ‘well’ and ‘badly’ consist in the true and the false (that is, after all, the function of any faculty of thought), but that of a faculty of practical thought is truth in agreement with the correct appetite." (EN 6.2.1139a27-30) Although medieval philosophers do not share many of the presuppositions (...)
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  16. Understanding Anscombe’s Absolutism.Marshall Bierson - 2024 - In Nathan Hauthaler & Nicholas Ogle, Anscombe and the Anscombe Archive. Philadelphia, PA: Collegium Institute for Catholic Thought and Culture. pp. 97-120.
  17. Subjektivität revisited: Sartre und die (post)moderne Philosophie des Subjekts.Jens Bonnemann & Alfred Betschart (eds.) - 2024 - Schwabe Verlag.
    In this paper I discuss aspects of Sartre’s philosophy in relation to contemporary approaches in analytic philosophy regarding self-consciousness and self-knowledge. In particular, I am interested in those approaches that take up certain considerations of Wittgenstein on transparency and immunity to error through misidentification in order to demystify our ability to make certain first-person claims without resorting to observation of ourselves. I will acknowledge the fruitfulness of such a dialogue between Sartre and Wittgenstein-inspired approaches but argue that it is restricted (...)
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  18. The Anscombean Mind by Adrian Haddock and Rachael Wiseman (eds.) (Routledge, 2022). Routledge Philosophical Minds series.Lucy Campbell - 2024 - Philosophy 99 (2):314-319.
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  19. Human Flourishing, Human Nature, and Practices: MacIntyre’s Ethics Still Requires a More Thomistic Metaphysics.Giulia Codognato - 2024 - Filozofia 79 (3):319-333.
    My aim in this paper is to investigate what enables human flourishing from a Thomistic perspective by considering Aquinas’ natural inclinations. I will argue that human beings flourish in different ways, depending on their practices. However, not every practice contributes to human flourishing, but only those that are consistent with human nature, which agents grasp through their natural inclinations. To support this argument, I will critically analyze MacIntyre’s account, referring mainly to his latest work (2016). MacIntyre has the merit of (...)
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  20. Anscombe and Practices: Between Philosophy and Social Science.Giulia Codognato & Manuele Dozzi (eds.) - 2024 - Trieste, Italy: Esercizi Filosofici - EUT.
    In this special issue, we present contributions that explore the significant influence of G.E.M. Anscombe’s philosophical insights on both philosophy and social science. Anscombe, a leading 20th-century philosopher, extensively addressed topics from metaphysics to morality, playing a key role in reviving Aristotelian-Thomistic philosophy. Deeply influenced by Wittgenstein, she emphasized language analysis and argued that morality should be grounded in human life and practices, rather than abstract principles. This issue highlights how her work, particularly her account of intentional action and her (...)
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  21. Anscombe and the Anscombe Archive.Nathan Hauthaler & Nicholas Ogle (eds.) - 2024 - Philadelphia, PA: Collegium Institute for Catholic Thought and Culture.
    The present collection of essays is dedicated to the work of Elizabeth Anscombe, in particular her work collected in the Anscombe Archive at the University of Pennsylvania. The collection brings together scholars working on Anscombe and her tradition, all of whom have significant expertise in Anscombe’s philosophical thought, with many having worked directly at the Archive. While a variety of perspectives on Anscombe’s thought are represented in the collection, including some vigorous scholarly disagreements, the contributing authors nevertheless share a commitment (...)
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  22. Anscombe on Money, Debt, and Usury.Graham Hubbs - 2024 - In Joseph J. Tinguely, The Palgrave Handbook of Philosophy and Money: Volume 2: Modern Thought. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 535-551.
    G. E. M. Anscombe gave a lecture in 1970 on the shift in attitudes toward usury between medieval and modern times. Over the course of this lecture she says a great deal about the ontology of money. Although she seems less than completely aware of the fact, her discussion marks the difference between a Roman conception of money, according to which money’s proper use destroys it, and Marx’s analysis of capitalist money, which, like a cancer, can grow endlessly. I analyze (...)
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  23. The Philosophy and History of the Moral ‘Ought’: Some of Anscombe’s Objections.Terence Irwin - 2024 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 27 (5):667-680.
    According to G.E.M Anscombe’s paper ‘Modern Moral Philosophy’, modern moral philosophy has introduced a spurious concept of moral obligation, and has therefore made a mistake that the Greeks, and Aristotle in particular, avoided. Anscombe argues that the modern concepts of obligation, duty, and the moral ‘ought’ are the remnants of an earlier, but post-Aristotelian conception of ethics, and that they ought to be abandoned. An examination of Anscombe’s historical and philosophical claims shows that we have no reason to take them (...)
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  24. Jenseits von Immunität und Transparenz: Sartre und Wittgenstein über Selbstbewusstsein und Wissen.Christos Kalpakidis - 2024 - In Alfred Betschart & Jens Bonnemann, Subjektivität revisited Sartre und die (post)moderne Philosophie des Subjekts.
    In this paper I discuss aspects of Sartre’s philosophy in relation to contemporary approaches in analytic philosophy regarding self-consciousness and self-knowledge. In particular, I am interested in those approaches that take up certain considerations of Wittgenstein on transparency and immunity to error through misidentification in order to demystify our ability to make certain first-person claims without resorting to observation of ourselves. I will acknowledge the fruitfulness of such a dialogue between Sartre and Wittgenstein-inspired approaches but argue that it is restricted (...)
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  25. Reading Wittgenstein with Anscombe, Going On to Ethics, by Cora Diamond.Michael Kremer - 2024 - Mind 133 (529):312-321.
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  26. Knowledge of language as self-knowledge.John Schwenkler - 2024 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 67 (10):4078-4102.
    In a series of early essays, beginning with "Must We Mean What We Say?", Stanley Cavell offers a sustained response to the argument that ordinary language philosophy is nothing more than amateur linguistics, carried out from the armchair -- so that philosophers' claims about "what we say", and what we mean when we say it, are necessarily in need of proper empirical support. The present paper provides a close reading of Cavell and a defense of his argument that, since a (...)
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  27. The categories of causation.John Schwenkler - 2024 - Synthese 203 (9):1-35.
    This paper is an essay in what Austin (_Proc Aristotel Soc_ 57: 1–30, 1956–1957) called "linguistic phenomenology". Its focus is on showing how the grammatical features of ordinary causal verbs, as revealed in the kinds of linguistic constructions they can figure in, can shed light on the nature of the processes that these verbs are used to describe. Specifically, drawing on the comprehensive classification of English verbs founds in Levin (_English verb classes and alternations: a preliminary investigation_, University of Chicago (...)
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  28. "I do what happens": Anscombe on Wittgenstein on the will.John Schwenkler - 2024 - In Nathan Hauthaler & Nicholas Ogle, Anscombe and the Anscombe Archive. Philadelphia, PA: Collegium Institute for Catholic Thought and Culture. pp. 1-22.
    This chapter analyses several pages of handwritten notes in which G. E. M. Anscombe explores her disagreement with Wittgenstein’s view of the will and of moral value. While the notes are undated, there is strong textual evidence for dating them to a period no later than the mid-1950s: first, because elements in them parallel what Anscombe wrote about Wittgenstein in a pair of letters to The Tablet in 1954; and second, because lines from the notes are mirrored in both the (...)
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  29. Action and Necessity: Wittgenstein's On Certainty and the Foundations of Ethics.Michael Wee - 2024 - Dissertation, Durham University
    This thesis develops an account of ethics called the Linguistic Perspective, which is realist in a practical, non-theoretical sense, and is rooted Wittgenstein’s 'On Certainty'. On this account, normativity is intrinsic to human action and language; the norms of ethics are the logical limits of the most basic, unassailable concepts that practical reasoning requires for intelligibility. Part I lays the groundwork for this account by developing a Tractarian Reading of 'On Certainty'. Here, I contend that 'On Certainty' is primarily concerned (...)
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  30. Anscombe's Philosophy of Law.Eric Wilkinson - 2024 - Dialogue 63 (3):513-519.
    Is there a necessary connection between law and morality? Elizabeth Anscombe's theory of civil authority provides the basis for a unique intervention into this debate. Her distinction between the rights internal to a practice and the external justification of said practice avoids the traditional objections to both legal positivism and natural law theories.
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  31. From causation to conscious control.Lieke Joske Franci Asma - 2023 - Philosophical Explorations 26 (3):1-17.
    Surprisingly little attention has been paid to the nature of conscious control. As a result, experiments suggesting that we lack conscious control over our actions cannot be properly evaluated. Joshua Shepherd (2015; 2021) aims to fill this gap. His proposal is grounded in the standard causalist account of action, according to which, simply put, bodily movements are controlled by the agent if and only if they are caused, in the right way, by the relevant psychological states. In this paper, I (...)
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  32. Self-consciousness and uses of 'I' : Sartre and Anscombe.Valérie Aucouturier - 2023 - In Talia Morag, Sartre and Analytic Philosophy. New York, NY:
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  33. Aquinas and Anscombe on Connaturality and Moral Knowledge1.John Haldane - 2023 - New Blackfriars 104 (1114):668-688.
    The idea of ‘connatural knowledge’ is attributed to Aquinas on the basis of passages in which he distinguishes between scientific and affective experiential knowledge of religious and moral truths. In a series of encyclicals beginning with Leo XIII's Aeterni Patris, popes have celebrated and commended Aquinas as the supreme guide in philosophy and theology and in some of these cited his discovery of connatural knowledge. The course and context of his ‘elevation’ are explored before proceeding to a discussion of moral (...)
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  34. THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF ELIZABETH ANSCOMBE edited by Roger Teichmann, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2022, pp. 520, £ 97.00, hbk. [REVIEW]Fergus Kerr - 2023 - New Blackfriars 104 (1111):373-376.
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  35. The Oxford Quartet: Moral Philosophy After the Logical Positivists. Lipscomb, B. J. B. (2021). The Women Are Up to Something: How Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley, and Iris Murdoch Revolutionized Ethics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Vsevolod Khoma - 2023 - Sententiae 42 (2):142-145.
    Review of Lipscomb, B. J. B. (2021). The Women Are Up to Something: How Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley, and Iris Murdoch Revolutionized Ethics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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  36. Anscombe's and von Wright's non‐causalist response to Davidson's challenge.Christian Kietzmann - 2023 - Philosophical Investigations 46 (2):240-263.
    Donald Davidson established causalism, i.e. the view that reasons are causes and that action explanation is causal explanation, as the dominant view within contemporary action theory. According to his “master argument”, we must distinguish between reasons the agent merely has and reasons she has and which actually explain what she did, and the only, or at any rate the best, way to make the distinction is by saying that the reasons for which an agent acts are causes of her action. (...)
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  37. Attention and Practical Knowledge.Hao Tang - 2023 - Journal of Human Cognition 7 (2):19-29.
    Practical knowledge, in the sense made famous by G. E. M. Anscombe, is “the knowledge that a man has of his intentional actions”. This knowledge is very ordinary, but philosophically it is not easy to understand. One illuminating approach is to see practical knowledge as a kind of self-knowledge or self-consciousness. I offer an enrichment of this approach, by (1) exploiting Gilbert Ryle’s discussion of heeding (that is, paying attention), in particular paying attention to one’s own intentional action, and (2) (...)
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  38. Ergon and Practical Reason. Anscombe’s Legacy and Natural Normativity.Maria Silvia Vaccarezza - 2023 - Acta Philosophica 32 (2):400-406.
    One of Elizabeth Anscombe’s most decisive legacies is the rejection of modern legalistic morality, in the name of a rescue of Aristotelian-inspired natural normativity. However, as I will argue in this contribution, this legacy does not seem to have been fully collected, neither by those who, like Philippa Foot, are explicitly inspired by Anscombe’s work, nor by those who, while apparently opposing its assumptions, have also somehow recovered it by different routes, as emblematically does Christine Korsgaard in her constitutivist proposal. (...)
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  39. The Women Are Up to Something: How Elisabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley, and Iris Murdoch Revolutionized Ethics. [REVIEW]Peter West - 2023 - Philosophical Quarterly 73 (3):921-923.
    A central notion in Benjamin Lipscomb's narrative of the rise of the ‘Wartime Quartet’—Anscombe, Foot, Midgley, and Murdoch—is that of philosophical pictures (e.
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  40. On Anscombe on Practical Knowledge and practical truth.Lucy Campbell - 2022 - In Roger Teichmann, The Oxford Handbook of Elizabeth Anscombe. New York, , NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press, USA.
    A central idea in Anscombe's philosophy of action is that of practical knowledge, the formally distinctive knowledge a person has of what she is intentionally doing. Anscombe also discusses 'practical truth', an idea she borrows from Aristotle, and which on her interpretation is a kind of truth whose bearer is not thought or language, but action. What is the relationship between practical knowledge and practical truth? What we might call the 'Simple View' of this relationship holds that practical knowledge is (...)
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  41. G.E.M Anscombe, Scritti di etica, a cura di Sergio Cremaschi.Sergio Cremaschi - 2022 - Brescia:
    -/- Did the US president who signed the order to use the atomic bomb stain his hands with blood or just ink? Are there cases in which a war is just? In such cases, is any war justifiable? Is ending the life of a terminally ill person different from murder? Do we need to agree on the definition of the embryo as a 'person' to know whether any action on the embryo is prohibited? Is the prohibition of contraception justified even (...)
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  42. Interrupting the conversation: Donald MacKinnon, wartime tutor of Anscombe, Midgley, Murdoch and Foot.Clare Mac Cumhaill & Rachael Wiseman - 2022 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 56 (6):838–850.
    Elizabeth Anscombe, Mary Midgley, Iris Murdoch and Philippa Foot all studied at Oxford University during the Second World War. One of their wartime tutors was Donald MacKinnon. This paper gives a broad overview of MacKinnon's philosophical outlook as it was developing at this time. Four talks from between 1938 and 1941—‘And the Son of Man That Thou Visiteth Him’ (1938), ‘What Is a Metaphysical Statement?’ (1940), ‘The Function of Philosophy in Education’ (1941) and ‘Revelation and Social Justice’ (1941)—give a foretaste (...)
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  43. The Importance of Murdoch's Early Encounters with Anscombe and Marcel.Clare Mac Cumhaill & Rachael Wiseman - 2022 - In Silvia Caprioglio Panizza & Mark Hopwood, The Murdochian Mind. New York, NY: Routledge.
    In his reference letter for Murdoch’s 1947 fellowship application at Newnham College, Cambridge, her erstwhile Oxford undergraduate tutor, Donald MacKinnon, remarks that Murdoch is ‘on the threshold of creative work of a high order’. This chapter outlines the nature of that ‘creative work’ and its early development. We show how Murdoch’s close study of the Christian existentialist philosopher and playwright Gabriel Marcel (1883–1973) came to inflect both her early critique of Jean Paul Sartre’s existentialism and her first attempts to show (...)
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  44. Paul Valéry et l'idéal de perfection.Béthuys Elie - 2022 - Klesis 53 (L'esprit de Valéry).
    In this essay, I argue that Valéry's poetic reflections offer valuable insights on the ancient (Aristotelian) ideal of beauty as perfection, which he rehabilitates and updates. I also show that these clarifications provide solutions to enduring aesthetic problems. To do this, I start from the modal vocabulary (necessary, possible, arbitrary) Valéry uses each time he wants to describe the relationship of an author to his composition. He therefore seems to have been deeply fascinated by the tension between the fact that (...)
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  45. Law, Reason, and Virtue in the Ethics of Aquinas: Insights from Anscombe.Leonard Ferry - 2022 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 38:54-70.
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  46. On the transcendental structure of Iris Murdoch's philosophical method.Jessy Jordan - 2022 - European Journal of Philosophy 30 (1):394-410.
    Recent scholarship has focused on the provocative suggestion that there is a deep unity linking the philosophical projects of Iris Murdoch, Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, and Mary Midgley. In addition to providing scholars with the opportunity to consider what these four shared, the unanimity story also offers an occasion to reflect on what is distinctive about each. Whereas Anscombe, Foot, and Midgley each turn to broadly Aristotelian resources for developing an alternative to the dominant non‐cognitivism of their day, Murdoch turns (...)
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  47. Kant and Anscombe: Two Contrasting Views on Aristotle’s ‘Virtue’.Manik Konch - 2022 - Philosophia 51 (2):793-810.
    The paper attempts to discuss two contrasting views on Aristotle’s notion of ‘virtue’ advocated by Immanuel Kant and G. E. M. Anscombe. Kant maintains that good will is the primary condition of moral action. It is the foundation of moral laws. Virtue is given the secondary status while describing the nature of moral conduct. On the contrary, Anscombe is critical of this Kantian normative approach to the virtue. In her contention, the Kantian deontology excludes the psychological conditions while theorizing morality. (...)
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  48. (1 other version)The women are up to something: How Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley, and Iris Murdoch revolutionized ethics.David Loner - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 30 (6):1144-1146.
    Volume 30, Issue 6, December 2022, Page 1144-1146.
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  49. The Women Are up to Something: How Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley, and Iris Murdoch Revolutionized Ethics by Benjamin Lipscomb (New York: Oxford University Press, 2021). [REVIEW]Cathy Mason - 2022 - Philosophy 97 (4):549-553.
  50. Anscombe and Intentional Agency Incompatibilism.Erasmus Mayr - 2022 - Synthese 200 (3):1-23.
    In “Causality and Determination”, Anscombe stressed that, in her view, physical determinism and free action were incompatible. As the relevant passage suggests, her espousal of incompatibilism was not merely due to specific features of human ‘ethical’ freedom, but due to general features of agency, intentionality, and voluntariness. For Anscombe went on to tentatively suggest that lack of physical determination was required for the intentional conduct of animals we would not classify as ‚free‘, too. In this paper, I examine three different (...)
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