Explore the foundations of moral thought and what guides right action.
This comprehensive study rethinks ethics from its Greek roots to modern views, framing morality as a practical, personal pursuit of the good.
This edition revisits core ideas with clarity. It traces ethical theory from Hedonism and Rationalism to Eudaimonism, and it explains how psychology, method, and character shape ethical life. Readers will see how a thinker like James Seth connects theory to daily conduct and to the idea of personality as the moral ideal.
- Clear definitions of ethics, morality, duty, and the good, with historical context.
- A structured look at major theories and their strengths and limits.
- Connections between thought, action, and the development of character.
- Guidance on how the ethical life relates to both inner insight and real-world duties.
Ideal for students of philosophy, ethics, or moral psychology, and for readers seeking a rigorous yet accessible map of moral ideas through history and into contemporary discussion. The book invites careful reading and thoughtful reflection on how we live and why.