In the last half century, the field of religious ethics has been inundated with various antirealist schools of moral thought. This book brings together a diverse group of scholars who represent different philosophical and theological outlooks to discuss the merits of constructivism vis-à-vis religious ethics.
Kevin Jung is Associate Professor of Christian Ethics at Wake Forest University School of Divinity, USA. He is the author of Christian Ethics and Commonsense Morality: An Intuitionist Account (Routledge, 2014) and Ethical Theory and Responsibility Ethics (2011).
Introduction Kevin Jung 1 Kantian Constructivism, Baseball and Christian Ethics Paul Weithman 2 A Humean Account of What Wrongness Amounts To Kevin Kinghorn 3 Constructivism in Ethics: A View from Hegelian Semantics Molly Farneth 4 What Should Theists Say about Constructivist Positions in Metaethics? Christian B. Miller 5 Kantian Constructivism, Autonomy, and Religious Ethics Charles Lockwood 6 On the Moral Significance of Nature: A Comparison of Hegelian Constructivism and Natural Law David A. Clairmont 7 Grounds of Normativity: Constructivism, Realism, and Theism Kevin Jung