Abstract
<div>Hume remarked on how our moral value-commitments set limits for what we are willing to imagine.&nbsp;Moral values also guide imagination when we envision variant scenarios and options for action.&nbsp;How do values reveal themselves through imagining? What does the manner through which values</div><div>appear tell us about the nature of values? Imagination furnishes a non-perceptual manner of arriving&nbsp;at moral determinations anchored to the irreducibly first-person experience of moral approval and&nbsp;disapproval. The commitment to one&rsquo;s values, surviving through every willingly imagined alteration&nbsp;of perspective, indicates a subjective necessity to values. At the same time, the values leaving their</div><div>trace in what we imagine, direct imagination to furnish reasons which necessitate belief and action.&nbsp;This subjective necessity generates an ideal of affective moral consistency and a criterion of suitability&nbsp;for proposed action.</div>Date
2007-01-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:edfebd56f56b4a9aba231ded1ce6ff5f1677-2954
1677-2954
10.5007/17445
https://doaj.org/article/edfebd56f56b4a9aba231ded1ce6ff5f