A Nietzschean Metaethics: Criticism of Some Contemporary Themes in Metaethics
By (Author) David Emmanuel Rowe
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
17th October 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
170.42
Hardback
216
Width 161mm, Height 228mm, Spine 23mm
513g
This book develops a novel interpretation of the late nineteenth-century German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche as holding a distinct and original metaethical position (a theory about our practice of ethics). It is, what might be called, a human-centered metaethics. A central achievement of A Nietzschean Metaethics is to bring Nietzsche into a conversation with the analytic metaethical tradition. To do so, David Emmanuel Rowe interprets Nietzsches use of such concepts as the notorious will to power; his ideal agent, the superman or bermensch; nihilism; the eternal recurrence; Perspectivism; and Being and Becoming. The result is a view of Nietzsche as a radical moral error theorist, which is to say he defends the view that all statements that appeal to some value for their truth are false. This theory is radical because Nietzsche argues that insofar as language requires certain concepts for its truth it is in error, in virtue of an appeal to some value. Rowe also offers a view where the increase in ones power is a standard by which one can make sense of Nietzsches so-called re-evaluation of all values. By means of this resolution, Nietzsche criticizes some contemporary themes in metaethics, such as particular views about moral motivation, reasons, moral error theory, and agency.
Nietzsche says one should philosophise with a hammer. In this book, David Rowe does just that, dismantling some central platforms of contemporary meta-ethics, especially its rationalism, but also constructing his own Nietzschean-inspired view that avoids those errors.
--Jack Reynolds, Professor of Philosophy at Deakin University, Melbourne
David Emmanuel Rowe is sessional lecturer/tutor at Deakin and Monash universities.