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W. D. Ross

Sir William David Ross KBE FBA (15 April 1877 – 5 May 1971), known as David Ross but usually cited as W. D. Ross, was a Scottish Aristotelian philosopher, translator, WWI veteran, civil servant, and university administrator. His best-known work is The Right and the Good (1930), in which he developed a pluralist, deontological form of intuitionist ethics in response to G. E. Moore's consequentialist form of intuitionism. Ross also critically edited and translated a number of Aristotle's works, such as his 12-volume translation of Aristotle together with John Alexander Smith, and wrote on other Greek philosophy.

Sir W. D. Ross

Born
William David Ross

(1877-04-15)15 April 1877
Thurso, Scotland
Died5 May 1971(1971-05-05) (aged 94)
Oxford, England
NationalityScottish
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
Balliol College, Oxford
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolAnalytic philosophy
Main interests
Ethics, Greek philosophy
Notable ideas
Deontological pluralism (ethical non-naturalism / ethical intuitionism / ethical pluralism),[1] prima facie moral duties,[2] criticism of consequentialism

Life

William David Ross was born in Thurso, Caithness in the north of Scotland the son of John Ross (1835-1905).[4]

He spent most of his first six years as a child in southern India.[5] He was educated at the Royal High School, Edinburgh, and the University of Edinburgh. In 1895, he gained a first class MA honours degree in classics. He completed his studies at Balliol College, Oxford, with a First in Classical Moderations in 1898 and a First in Literae Humaniores ('Greats', a combination of philosophy and ancient history) in 1900.[6] He was made a Fellow of Merton College in 1900, a position he held until 1945;[7] he was elected to a tutorial fellowship at Oriel College in October 1902.[8]

With the outbreak of World War I, Ross joined the army in 1915 with a commission on the special list.[9] He held a series of positions involved with the supply of munitions.[5] At the time of the armistice he held the rank of major and was Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Ministry of Munitions.[9] He was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1918 in recognition of his wartime service. For his post-war services to various public bodies he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1938.[9][5]

Ross was White's Professor of Moral Philosophy (1923–1928), Provost of Oriel College, Oxford (1929–1947), Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1941 to 1944 and Pro-Vice-Chancellor (1944–1947). He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1939 to 1940. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy and was its President from 1936–to 1940.[9] Of the many governmental committees on which he served one was the Civil Service Tribunal, of which he was chairman. One of his two colleagues was Leonard Woolf, who thought that the whole system of fixing governmental remuneration should be on the same basis as the US model, dividing the civil service into a relatively small number of pay grades.[10] Ross did not agree with this radical proposal. In 1947 he was appointed chairman of the first Royal Commission on the Press, United Kingdom. He was elected an honorary fellow of Trinity College Dublin in 1947.[11]

 
The Ross family grave, Grange Cemetery

He died in Oxford on 5 May 1971. He is memorialised on his parents' grave in the Grange Cemetery in Edinburgh.

Family

His younger brother was Rev Donald George Ross (1879-1943).

He married Edith Ogden in 1906 and they had four daughters, Margaret (who married Robin Harrison), Eleanor, Rosalind (who married John Miller Martin), and Katharine. Edith died in 1953.

He was a cousin of Berriedale Keith.

Ross's ethical theory

W. D. Ross was a moral realist, a non-naturalist, and an intuitionist.[12] He argued that there are moral truths. He wrote:

The moral order...is just as much part of the fundamental nature of the universe (and...of any possible universe in which there are moral agents at all) as is the spatial or numerical structure expressed in the axioms of geometry or arithmetic.[13]

Thus, according to Ross, the claim that something is good is true if that thing really is good. Ross also agreed with G.E. Moore's claim that any attempt to define ethical statements solely in terms of statements about the natural world commits the naturalistic fallacy. Furthermore, the terms "right" and "good" are indefinable.[14] This means not only that they cannot be defined in terms of natural properties but also that it is not possible to define one in terms of the other.

Ross rejected Moore's consequentialist ethics. According to consequentialist theories, what people ought to do is determined only by whether their actions will bring about the best. By contrast, Ross argues that maximising the good is only one of several prima facie duties (prima facie obligations) which play a role in determining what a person ought to do in any given case.

Duties

In The Right and the Good, Ross lists seven prima facie duties, without claiming his list to be all-inclusive: fidelity; reparation; gratitude; justice; beneficence; non-maleficence; and self-improvement. In any given situation, any number of these prima facie duties may apply. In the case of ethical dilemmas, they may even contradict one another. Someone could have a prima facie duty of reparation, say, a duty to help people who helped you move house, move house themselves, and a prima facie duty of fidelity, such as taking your children on a promised trip to the park, and these could conflict. Nonetheless, there can never be a true ethical dilemma, Ross would argue, because one of the prima facie duties in a given situation is always the weightiest, and over-rules all the others. This is thus the absolute obligation or absolute duty, the action that the person ought to perform.[15]

It is frequently argued, however, that Ross should have used the term "pro tanto" rather than "prima facie". Shelly Kagan, for example, wrote:

It may be helpful to note explicitly that in distinguishing between pro tanto and prima facie reasons I depart from the unfortunate terminology proposed by Ross, which has invited confusion and misunderstanding. I take it that – despite his misleading label – it is actually pro tanto reasons that Ross has in mind in his discussion of what he calls prima facie duties.[16]

Explaining the difference between pro tanto and prima facie, Kagan wrote: "A pro tanto reason has genuine weight, but nonetheless may be outweighed by other considerations. Thus, calling a reason a pro tanto reason is to be distinguished from calling it a prima facie reason, which I take to involve an epistemological qualification: a prima facie reason appears to be a reason, but may actually not be a reason at all."[16]

Values and intuition

According to Ross, self-evident intuition shows that there are four kinds of things that are intrinsically good: pleasure, knowledge, virtue and justice.[17][18] "Virtue" refers to actions or dispositions to act from the appropriate motives, for example, from the desire to do one's duty.[14] "Justice", on the other hand, is about happiness in proportion to merit. As such, pleasure, knowledge and virtue all concern states of mind, in contrast to justice, which concerns a relation between two states of mind.[14] These values come in degrees and are comparable with each other. Ross holds that virtue has the highest value while pleasure has the lowest value.[18][19] He goes so far as to suggest that "no amount of pleasure is equal to any amount of virtue, that in fact virtue belongs to a higher order of value".[20]: 150  Values can also be compared within each category, for example, well-grounded knowledge of general principle is more valuable than weakly grounded knowledge of isolated matters of fact.[20]: 146–7 [14]

According to Ross's intuitionism, we can know moral truths through intuition, for example, that it is wrong to lie or that knowledge is intrinsically good.[14] Intuitions involve a direct apprehension that is not mediated by inferences or deductions: they are self-evident and therefore not in need of any additional proof.[17] This ability is not inborn but has to be developed on the way to reaching mental maturity.[20]: 29  But in its fully developed form, we can know moral truths just as well as we can know mathematical truths like the axioms of geometry or arithmetic.[20]: 30 [21] This self-evident knowledge is limited to general principles: we can come to know the prima facie duties this way but not our absolute duty in a particular situation: what we should do all things considered.[20]: 19–20, 30  All we can do is consult perception to determine which prima facie duty has the highest normative weight in this particular case, even though this usually does not amount to knowledge proper due to the complexity involved in most specific cases.[14]

Criticism and influence

A frequent criticism of Ross's ethics is that it is unsystematic and often fails to provide clear-cut ethical answers. Another is that "moral intuitions" are not a reliable basis for ethics, because they are fallible, can vary widely from individual to individual, and are often rooted in our evolutionary past in ways that should make us suspicious of their capacity to track moral truth.[22] Additionally there is no consideration of the consequence of the action undertaken, as with all deontological approaches.[23]

Ross's deontological pluralism was a true innovation and provided a plausible alternative to Kantian deontology.[14] His ethical intuitionism found few followers among his contemporaries but has seen a revival by the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st century. Among the philosophers influenced by The Right and the Good are Philip Stratton-Lake, Robert Audi, Michael Huemer, and C.D. Broad.[17]

Selected works

References

  1. ^ "William David Ross" by David L. Simpson in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2012
  2. ^ A Simple Ethical Theory Based on W. D. Ross
  3. ^ Principles of Biomedical Ethics (1985), with James F. Childress, in which the authors acknowledge their debt towards Ross.
  4. ^ Grave of John Ross, Grange Cemetery
  5. ^ a b c Warnock, G., & Wiggins, D. (2004). "Ross, Sir (William) David (1877–1971), philosopher". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31629. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 12 April 2022.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ Oxford University Calendar 1905, Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1905, pp. 137, 182.
  7. ^ Levens, R.G.C., ed. (1964). Merton College Register 1900–1964. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. p. 18.
  8. ^ "University intelligence". The Times. No. 36902. London. 18 October 1902. p. 11.
  9. ^ a b c d G. N. Clark, ‘Sir David Ross’, Proceedings of the British Academy, 57 (1971), 525–43
  10. ^ The Journey not the Arrival Matters by Leonard Woolf, 1969.
  11. ^ Webb, D.A. (1992). J.R., Barlett (ed.). Trinity College Dublin Record Volume 1991. Dublin: Trinity College Dublin Press. ISBN 1-871408-07-5.
  12. ^ Stratton-Lake, Philip (2002). "Introduction". In Stratton-Lake, Philip (ed.). The right and the good. Oxford: Clarendon Press. doi:10.1093/0199252653.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-153096-8. OCLC 302367339.
  13. ^ Ross, W. D. (2002). "What Makes Right Acts Right?" (PDF). The right and the good. Philip Stratton-Lake. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 29–30. doi:10.1093/0199252653.003.0002. ISBN 978-0-19-153096-8. OCLC 302367339. The moral order expressed in these propositions is just as much part of the fundamental nature of the universe (and, we may add, of any possible universe in which there were moral agents at all) as is the spatial or numerical structure expressed in the axioms of geometry or arithmetic.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Skelton, Anthony (2012). "William David Ross". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  15. ^ Ross, William David (1930). The Right and the Good (1946 reprint ed.). London: Oxford University Press. p. 21.
  16. ^ a b Shelly Kagan, The Limits of Morality, (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989) p. 17n.
  17. ^ a b c Simpson, David L. "William David Ross". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  18. ^ a b Burgh, W. G. de (1931). "The Right and the Good. By W. D. Ross M.A., LL.D., Provost of Oriel College, Oxford. (Oxford: At the Clarendon Press. 1930. Pp. Vi + 176. Price 10s. 6d.)". Philosophy. 6 (22): 236–40. doi:10.1017/S0031819100045265. S2CID 170734138.
  19. ^ Borchert, Donald (2006). "Ross, William David". Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2nd Edition. Macmillan.
  20. ^ a b c d e Ross, W. D. (2002) [1930]. The Right and the Good. Clarendon Press.
  21. ^ Craig, Edward (1996). "Ross, William David". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Routledge.
  22. ^ For a discussion of these and other common criticisms of Ross's ethics, see Simpson, "William David Ross."
  23. ^ Gaw, Allan (2011). On moral grounds : lessons from the history of research ethics. Michael H. J. Burns. Glasgow: SA Press. ISBN 978-0-9563242-2-1. OCLC 766246011.

Further reading

  • G. N. Clark, ‘Sir David Ross’, Proceedings of the British Academy, 57 (1971), 525–43
  • Phillips, David. Rossian Ethics: W.D. Ross and Contemporary Moral Theory. New York: Oxford University Press, 2019.
  • Stout, A. K. 1967. 'Ross, William David'. In P. Edwards (ed.), The Encyclopaedia of Philosophy. New York: Macmillan: 216–217.
  • Stratton-Lake, Philip. 2002. 'Introduction'. In Ross, W. D. 1930. The Right and the Good. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Timmons, Mark. 2003. 'Moral Writings and The Right and the Good'. [Book Review] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

External links

Academic offices
Preceded by
Lancelot Ridley Phelps
Provost of Oriel College, Oxford
1929–1947
Succeeded by
George Clark
Preceded by Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University
1941–1944
Succeeded by

ross, william, david, ross, april, 1877, 1971, known, david, ross, usually, cited, scottish, aristotelian, philosopher, translator, veteran, civil, servant, university, administrator, best, known, work, right, good, 1930, which, developed, pluralist, deontolog. Sir William David Ross KBE FBA 15 April 1877 5 May 1971 known as David Ross but usually cited as W D Ross was a Scottish Aristotelian philosopher translator WWI veteran civil servant and university administrator His best known work is The Right and the Good 1930 in which he developed a pluralist deontological form of intuitionist ethics in response to G E Moore s consequentialist form of intuitionism Ross also critically edited and translated a number of Aristotle s works such as his 12 volume translation of Aristotle together with John Alexander Smith and wrote on other Greek philosophy Sir W D RossKBE FBABornWilliam David Ross 1877 04 15 15 April 1877Thurso ScotlandDied5 May 1971 1971 05 05 aged 94 Oxford EnglandNationalityScottishAlma materUniversity of EdinburghBalliol College OxfordEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalytic philosophyMain interestsEthics Greek philosophyNotable ideasDeontological pluralism ethical non naturalism ethical intuitionism ethical pluralism 1 prima facie moral duties 2 criticism of consequentialismInfluences Aristotle Immanuel Kant G E Moore H A PrichardInfluenced Robert Audi Tom Beauchamp 3 Tara Smith Bernard Gert Contents 1 Life 2 Family 3 Ross s ethical theory 3 1 Duties 3 2 Values and intuition 3 3 Criticism and influence 4 Selected works 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife EditWilliam David Ross was born in Thurso Caithness in the north of Scotland the son of John Ross 1835 1905 4 He spent most of his first six years as a child in southern India 5 He was educated at the Royal High School Edinburgh and the University of Edinburgh In 1895 he gained a first class MA honours degree in classics He completed his studies at Balliol College Oxford with a First in Classical Moderations in 1898 and a First in Literae Humaniores Greats a combination of philosophy and ancient history in 1900 6 He was made a Fellow of Merton College in 1900 a position he held until 1945 7 he was elected to a tutorial fellowship at Oriel College in October 1902 8 With the outbreak of World War I Ross joined the army in 1915 with a commission on the special list 9 He held a series of positions involved with the supply of munitions 5 At the time of the armistice he held the rank of major and was Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Ministry of Munitions 9 He was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1918 in recognition of his wartime service For his post war services to various public bodies he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1938 9 5 Ross was White s Professor of Moral Philosophy 1923 1928 Provost of Oriel College Oxford 1929 1947 Vice Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1941 to 1944 and Pro Vice Chancellor 1944 1947 He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1939 to 1940 He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy and was its President from 1936 to 1940 9 Of the many governmental committees on which he served one was the Civil Service Tribunal of which he was chairman One of his two colleagues was Leonard Woolf who thought that the whole system of fixing governmental remuneration should be on the same basis as the US model dividing the civil service into a relatively small number of pay grades 10 Ross did not agree with this radical proposal In 1947 he was appointed chairman of the first Royal Commission on the Press United Kingdom He was elected an honorary fellow of Trinity College Dublin in 1947 11 The Ross family grave Grange Cemetery He died in Oxford on 5 May 1971 He is memorialised on his parents grave in the Grange Cemetery in Edinburgh Family EditHis younger brother was Rev Donald George Ross 1879 1943 He married Edith Ogden in 1906 and they had four daughters Margaret who married Robin Harrison Eleanor Rosalind who married John Miller Martin and Katharine Edith died in 1953 He was a cousin of Berriedale Keith Ross s ethical theory EditW D Ross was a moral realist a non naturalist and an intuitionist 12 He argued that there are moral truths He wrote The moral order is just as much part of the fundamental nature of the universe and of any possible universe in which there are moral agents at all as is the spatial or numerical structure expressed in the axioms of geometry or arithmetic 13 Thus according to Ross the claim that something is good is true if that thing really is good Ross also agreed with G E Moore s claim that any attempt to define ethical statements solely in terms of statements about the natural world commits the naturalistic fallacy Furthermore the terms right and good are indefinable 14 This means not only that they cannot be defined in terms of natural properties but also that it is not possible to define one in terms of the other Ross rejected Moore s consequentialist ethics According to consequentialist theories what people ought to do is determined only by whether their actions will bring about the best By contrast Ross argues that maximising the good is only one of several prima facie duties prima facie obligations which play a role in determining what a person ought to do in any given case Duties Edit In The Right and the Good Ross lists seven prima facie duties without claiming his list to be all inclusive fidelity reparation gratitude justice beneficence non maleficence and self improvement In any given situation any number of these prima facie duties may apply In the case of ethical dilemmas they may even contradict one another Someone could have a prima facie duty of reparation say a duty to help people who helped you move house move house themselves and a prima facie duty of fidelity such as taking your children on a promised trip to the park and these could conflict Nonetheless there can never be a true ethical dilemma Ross would argue because one of the prima facie duties in a given situation is always the weightiest and over rules all the others This is thus the absolute obligation or absolute duty the action that the person ought to perform 15 It is frequently argued however that Ross should have used the term pro tanto rather than prima facie Shelly Kagan for example wrote It may be helpful to note explicitly that in distinguishing between pro tanto and prima facie reasons I depart from the unfortunate terminology proposed by Ross which has invited confusion and misunderstanding I take it that despite his misleading label it is actually pro tanto reasons that Ross has in mind in his discussion of what he calls prima facie duties 16 Explaining the difference between pro tanto and prima facie Kagan wrote A pro tanto reason has genuine weight but nonetheless may be outweighed by other considerations Thus calling a reason a pro tanto reason is to be distinguished from calling it a prima facie reason which I take to involve an epistemological qualification a prima facie reason appears to be a reason but may actually not be a reason at all 16 Values and intuition Edit According to Ross self evident intuition shows that there are four kinds of things that are intrinsically good pleasure knowledge virtue and justice 17 18 Virtue refers to actions or dispositions to act from the appropriate motives for example from the desire to do one s duty 14 Justice on the other hand is about happiness in proportion to merit As such pleasure knowledge and virtue all concern states of mind in contrast to justice which concerns a relation between two states of mind 14 These values come in degrees and are comparable with each other Ross holds that virtue has the highest value while pleasure has the lowest value 18 19 He goes so far as to suggest that no amount of pleasure is equal to any amount of virtue that in fact virtue belongs to a higher order of value 20 150 Values can also be compared within each category for example well grounded knowledge of general principle is more valuable than weakly grounded knowledge of isolated matters of fact 20 146 7 14 According to Ross s intuitionism we can know moral truths through intuition for example that it is wrong to lie or that knowledge is intrinsically good 14 Intuitions involve a direct apprehension that is not mediated by inferences or deductions they are self evident and therefore not in need of any additional proof 17 This ability is not inborn but has to be developed on the way to reaching mental maturity 20 29 But in its fully developed form we can know moral truths just as well as we can know mathematical truths like the axioms of geometry or arithmetic 20 30 21 This self evident knowledge is limited to general principles we can come to know the prima facie duties this way but not our absolute duty in a particular situation what we should do all things considered 20 19 20 30 All we can do is consult perception to determine which prima facie duty has the highest normative weight in this particular case even though this usually does not amount to knowledge proper due to the complexity involved in most specific cases 14 Criticism and influence Edit A frequent criticism of Ross s ethics is that it is unsystematic and often fails to provide clear cut ethical answers Another is that moral intuitions are not a reliable basis for ethics because they are fallible can vary widely from individual to individual and are often rooted in our evolutionary past in ways that should make us suspicious of their capacity to track moral truth 22 Additionally there is no consideration of the consequence of the action undertaken as with all deontological approaches 23 Ross s deontological pluralism was a true innovation and provided a plausible alternative to Kantian deontology 14 His ethical intuitionism found few followers among his contemporaries but has seen a revival by the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st century Among the philosophers influenced by The Right and the Good are Philip Stratton Lake Robert Audi Michael Huemer and C D Broad 17 Selected works Edit1908 Nicomachean Ethics Translated by W D Ross Oxford Clarendon Press 1923 Aristotle 1924 Aristotle s Metaphysics 1927 The Basis of Objective Judgments in Ethics International Journal of Ethics 37 113 127 1930 The Right and the Good 1936 Aristotle s Physics 1939 Foundations of Ethics 1949 Aristotle s Prior and Posterior Analytics 1951 Plato s Theory of Ideas 1954 Kant s Ethical Theory A Commentary on the Grundlegung zur Metaphysik der Sitten Oxford Oxford University Press References Edit William David Ross by David L Simpson in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2012 A Simple Ethical Theory Based on W D Ross Principles of Biomedical Ethics 1985 with James F Childress in which the authors acknowledge their debt towards Ross Grave of John Ross Grange Cemetery a b c Warnock G amp Wiggins D 2004 Ross Sir William David 1877 1971 philosopher Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 31629 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Retrieved 12 April 2022 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Subscription or UK public library membership required Oxford University Calendar 1905 Oxford Clarendon Press 1905 pp 137 182 Levens R G C ed 1964 Merton College Register 1900 1964 Oxford Basil Blackwell p 18 University intelligence The Times No 36902 London 18 October 1902 p 11 a b c d G N Clark Sir David Ross Proceedings of the British Academy 57 1971 525 43 The Journey not the Arrival Matters by Leonard Woolf 1969 Webb D A 1992 J R Barlett ed Trinity College Dublin Record Volume 1991 Dublin Trinity College Dublin Press ISBN 1 871408 07 5 Stratton Lake Philip 2002 Introduction In Stratton Lake Philip ed The right and the good Oxford Clarendon Press doi 10 1093 0199252653 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 153096 8 OCLC 302367339 Ross W D 2002 What Makes Right Acts Right PDF The right and the good Philip Stratton Lake Oxford Clarendon Press pp 29 30 doi 10 1093 0199252653 003 0002 ISBN 978 0 19 153096 8 OCLC 302367339 The moral order expressed in these propositions is just as much part of the fundamental nature of the universe and we may add of any possible universe in which there were moral agents at all as is the spatial or numerical structure expressed in the axioms of geometry or arithmetic a b c d e f g Skelton Anthony 2012 William David Ross The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 12 January 2021 Ross William David 1930 The Right and the Good 1946 reprint ed London Oxford University Press p 21 a b Shelly Kagan The Limits of Morality Oxford Clarendon Press 1989 p 17n a b c Simpson David L William David Ross Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 12 January 2021 a b Burgh W G de 1931 The Right and the Good By W D Ross M A LL D Provost of Oriel College Oxford Oxford At the Clarendon Press 1930 Pp Vi 176 Price 10s 6d Philosophy 6 22 236 40 doi 10 1017 S0031819100045265 S2CID 170734138 Borchert Donald 2006 Ross William David Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2nd Edition Macmillan a b c d e Ross W D 2002 1930 The Right and the Good Clarendon Press Craig Edward 1996 Ross William David Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Routledge For a discussion of these and other common criticisms of Ross s ethics see Simpson William David Ross Gaw Allan 2011 On moral grounds lessons from the history of research ethics Michael H J Burns Glasgow SA Press ISBN 978 0 9563242 2 1 OCLC 766246011 Further reading EditG N Clark Sir David Ross Proceedings of the British Academy 57 1971 525 43 Phillips David Rossian Ethics W D Ross and Contemporary Moral Theory New York Oxford University Press 2019 Stout A K 1967 Ross William David In P Edwards ed The Encyclopaedia of Philosophy New York Macmillan 216 217 Stratton Lake Philip 2002 Introduction In Ross W D 1930 The Right and the Good Oxford Oxford University Press Timmons Mark 2003 Moral Writings and The Right and the Good Book Review Notre Dame Philosophical ReviewsExternal links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article William David Ross Skelton Anthony William David Ross In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy William David Ross by David L Simpson in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2012 William David Ross a biography and online lectures at the Gifford Lectures website Cooley Ken Sir David Ross s Pluralistic Theory of Duty The Beginnings Academic officesPreceded byLancelot Ridley Phelps Provost of Oriel College Oxford1929 1947 Succeeded byGeorge ClarkPreceded byGeorge Stuart Gordon Vice Chancellor of Oxford University1941 1944 Succeeded byRichard Winn Livingstone Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W D Ross amp oldid 1135922333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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