the ONLY version of theistic ethics that he deals with is divine command ethics.
He grants that the golden rule can be derived from religion but adds that it can also be derived from elsewhere. Yes, but that elsewhere may be another milieu of convictions about how everything fits together/adds up/makes sense can be found. Is any of them systematically materialistic? Hobbes? But does Hobbes want to follow the golden rule for the right reason? Any other candidates?
The question I have to be able to answer before writing this book is how Buddhist ethics would fit in.
He grants that the golden rule can be derived from religion but adds that it can also be derived from elsewhere. Yes, but that elsewhere may be another milieu of convictions about how everything fits together/adds up/makes sense can be found. Is any of them systematically materialistic? Hobbes? But does Hobbes want to follow the golden rule for the right reason? Any other candidates?
The question I have to be able to answer before writing this book is how Buddhist ethics would fit in.
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