W. D. Ross

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Western Philosophy
20th-century philosophy
Name
William David (W.D.) Ross
Birth 15 April 1877 (Thurso, Scotland)
Death 5 May 1971 (Oxford, United Kingdom)
School/tradition Analytic philosophy
Main interests Ethics, Greek philosophy
Notable ideas 'Pluralist' or 'generalist' deontology; Prima facie moral duties
Influenced by G. E. Moore, H. A. Prichard
Influenced Robert Audi, Tara Smith

Sir (William) David Ross KBE (15 April 18775 May 1971) was a Scottish philosopher, known for work in ethics. His best known work is The Right and the Good (1930), and he is perhaps best known for developing a pluralist, deontological form of intuitionist ethics in response to G.E. Moore's intuitionism. However, Ross also translated a number of Aristotle's works, and wrote on Greek philosophy.

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[edit] Life

William David Ross was born in Thurso, Caithness in the north of Scotland. He spent most of his first six years as a child in southern India. He was educated at the Royal High School, Edinburgh and the University of Edinburgh. In 1895, he gained a first class MA degree in classics. He completed his studies at Balliol College, Oxford and gained a lectureship at Oriel College in 1900, followed by a fellowship in 1902.

Ross joined the army in 1915. During World War I he worked in the Ministry of munitions and was a major on the special list. He received the Order of the British Empire for this work. In 1938 he was knighted.

Ross was White's Professor of Moral Philosophy (1923-1928), Provost of Oriel College, Oxford (19291947), Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1941 to 1944 and Pro-Vice-Chancellor (19441947). He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1939 to 1940.

He married Edith Ogden in 1906 and they had four daughters, Margaret, Rosalind, Eleanor and Katharine. Edith died in 1953 and he died in Oxford in 1971.

[edit] Ross's ethical theory

W.D. Ross was a moral realist, a non-naturalist, and an intuitionist.[1] He argued that there are moral truths. He wrote:

The moral order...is just as much part of the fundamental nature of the universe (and...of any possible universe in which there are moral agents at all) as is the spatial or numerical structure expressed in the axioms of geometry or arithmetic[2]

Thus, according to Ross, the claim that something is good is true if that thing really is good. Ross also agreed with G.E. Moore's claim that any attempt to define ethical statements solely in terms of statements about the natural world commits the naturalistic fallacy.

Ross rejected Moore's consequentialist ethics. Claiming that consequentialism is false because according to consequentialist theories, what people ought to do can is determined only by whether their actions will bring about the most good. Instead, Ross argues maximising the good is only one of several prima facie obligations which play a role in determining what a person ought to do in any given case.

Ross gives a list of seven prima facie obligations, which he does not claim is all-inclusive: fidelity; reparation; gratitude; non-maleficence; justice; beneficence; and self-improvement. In any given situation, any number of these prima facie obligations may apply. In the case of ethical dilemmas, they may even contradict one another. Someone could have a prima facie obligation of reparation, say, an obligation to help people who helped you shift house, shift house themselves, and a prima facie obligation of fidelity, say, taking your children on a promised trip to the park, and these could conflict. Nonetheless, there can never be a true ethical dilemma, Ross would argue, because one of the prima facie obligations in a given situation is always the weightiest, and overrules all the others. This is thus the absolute obligation, the action that the person ought to perform.

[edit] Selected works

  • 1908: Aristotle. Nichomachean Ethics. Translated by W.D. Ross. Oxford: Clarendon Press. [1]
  • 1923: Aristotle
  • 1924: Aristotle's Metaphysics
  • 1927: 'The Basis of Objective Judgments in Ethics'. International Journal of Ethics, 37: 113-127.
  • 1930: The Right and the Good
  • 1936: Aristotle's Physics
  • 1939: Foundations of Ethics
  • 1951: Plato's Theory of Ideas
  • 1954: Kant's Ethical Theory

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Stratton-Lake, Philip. (2002). 'Introduction'. In Ross, W.D. 1930. The Right and the Good. Reprinted 2002. Oxford: Oxford University Press: ix.
  2. ^ Ross, W.D. 1930. The Right and the Good. Reprinted with an introduction by Philip Stratton-Lake. 2002. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

[edit] References

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