Ethics after Darwin: Completing the Revolution

Authors

  • Rainer Ebert PhD. Visiting Research Fellow Centre de recherche en éthique, Montréal, Canada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62865/bjbio.v11i3.171

Abstract

This is a big-picture discussion of an important implication of Darwinism for ethics. I argue that there is a misfit between our scientific view of the natural world and the view, still dominant in academic philosophy and wider society alike, that there is a discrete hierarchy of moral status among conscious beings. I will suggest that the clear line of traditional morality – between human beings and other animals – is a remnant of an obsolete moral outlook, not least because it has no counterpart in empirical reality, and I will invite the reader to think, with me, about tenable alternatives.

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Published

2020-11-01

How to Cite

1.
Ebert R. Ethics after Darwin: Completing the Revolution. BJBio [Internet]. 2020 Nov. 1 [cited 2025 Sep. 25];11(3):30-5. Available from: http://bjbio.bioethics.org.bd/index.php/BJBio/article/view/171