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A defense of first-personal phenomenological experience: Responses to Sticker and Saunders

  • Autores: Jeanine M. Grenberg
  • Localización: Con-textos Kantianos: International Journal of Philosophy, ISSN-e 2386-7655, Nº. 8, 2018, págs. 370-376
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • In this paper, I respond to questions Sticker and Saunders raise about integrating third-personal interactions within my phenomenological first-personal account of moral obligatedness.  Sticker argues that third-personal interactions are more central for grounding moral obligatedness than I admit.  Saunders turns things around and suggests we might not even be able to access third-personal interactions with others at the level one would need to in order to secure proper moral interactions with them. I argue in response that both these challenges misunderstand something about my phenomenological first-personal account of the grounding of moral obligation.  Sticker assumes that I make absolutely no room for third-personal interactions as important for morality, but that is not the case.  And Saunders assumes that first-, second- and third-personal interactions demand phenomenological access to oneself and others as transcendentally free, but I deny that claim.  I will consider each of these challenges in turn.


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