Critical notice of Bradley's Ethical Studies
Mind, vol. 1, no. 4, 1876, pp. 545–549
Abstract
Here, Sidgwick discusses Bradley’s main ethical principle that self-realisation is the ultimate aim of practice, noting the oddity of Bradley’s acknowledgment in another paper in Ethical Studies that he does not know what he means by ‘self’, ‘real’ or ‘realise’. In an essay comparing determinism and indeterminism, Bradley specifies the notion of ‘self’ by stating that each person has a definite character (as well as a degree of ‘raw material of disposition’), which under certain circumstances expresses itself in actions of a particular kind. In his paper on why we ought to be moral, however, Bradley starts afresh, arguing that the self we try to realise is a whole, that is to say, the ultimate end. Then again, in a third paper, he speaks of the person as a social being, stating that ‘we have found self-realization, duty, happiness in one, when we have found our function as an organ in the social organism.’ Given these various attempts, Sidgwick holds that Bradley’s main ethical argument lacks the coherence and completeness it would require to be tenable.
