Moral Reasons
Oxford, 1993
Abstract
This book defends a form of cognitivism in the theory of motivation, and particularism in the theory of practical reason, with special application to moral motivation and moral reasons. It asks what sort of objectivity (if any) such reasons can claim, and goes on to use these results to attack consequentialism and defend the possibility of agent-relative reasons. The intended conclusion is a form of particularist deontology.
