Phainomena (Dec 2021)

Max Scheler’s Socratesism. An Introduction of a Phenomenological Normative Ethics

  • Wei Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.32022/PHI30.2021.118-119.6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 118-119
pp. 141 – 160

Abstract

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Socrates’s question is the starting point of all ethics. In his phenomenological value-personalism, Scheler transformed it to the question: “How ‘should’ ‘I’ be and live?” Fundamentally, “I” refers to the person, and “should” means the “ideal ought.” Ultimately, “I” as the person should engage in self-becoming towards its own ideal ordo amoris and ideal value-essence. In this sense, the end-result of Scheler’s material ethics of values is precisely a phenomenological normative ethics, which is neither a normative ethics in the general sense nor an Aristotelian ethics of virtue, but a more essential ethics of person.

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