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  1. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion
  2. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 67
  3. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 67, Issue 2, April 2010
  4. Winch and Wittgenstein on moral harm and absolute safety
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International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 81
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 80
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 79
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 78
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 77
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 76
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 75
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 74
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 73
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 72
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 71
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 70
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 69
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 68
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 67
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 67, Issue 3, June 2010
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 67, Issue 2, April 2010
The problem of evil: skeptical theism leads to moral paralysis
Winch and Wittgenstein on moral harm and absolute safety
The ontomystical argument revisited
J. L. Schellenberg: The will to imagine: a justification of skeptical religion : Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London, 2007, xv and 267
Sharon Krishek: Kierkegaard on faith and love : Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2009, 201
Christopher Ben Simpson: Religion, metaphysics, and the postmodern: William Desmond and John D. Caputo : Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 2009, 213 + x
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 67, Issue 1, February 2010
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 66
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 65
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 64
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 63
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 62
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 61
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 60
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 59
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 58
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 57
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 56
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 55
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 54
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 53
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 52
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 51
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 50
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 49
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 48
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 47
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 46
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 45
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 44
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 43
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 42
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion : Volume 41

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Winch and Wittgenstein on moral harm and absolute safety

Content Provider Springer Nature Link
Author Burley, Mikel
Copyright Year 2009
Abstract This paper examines Wittgenstein’s conception of absolute safety in the light of two potential problems exposed by Winch. These are that, firstly: even if someone’s life has been virtuous so far, the contingency of its remaining so until death vitiates the claim that the virtuous person cannot be harmed; and secondly: when voiced from a first-person standpoint, the claim to be absolutely safe due to one’s virtuousness appears hubristic and self-undermining. I argue that Wittgenstein’s mystical conception of safety, unlike some others, requires no claim about one’s own virtue and hence can be construed as avoiding these problems.
Starting Page 81
Ending Page 94
Page Count 14
File Format PDF
ISSN 00207047
Journal International Journal for Philosophy of Religion
Volume Number 67
Issue Number 2
e-ISSN 15728684
Language English
Publisher Springer Netherlands
Publisher Date 2009-07-17
Publisher Place Dordrecht
Access Restriction One Nation One Subscription (ONOS)
Subject Keyword Wittgenstein, Ludwig Winch, Peter Absolute safety Moral harm Ethics Mysticism Philosophy of Religion
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
Subject Philosophy
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