- Richard Brandt
Richard Brandt (1910-1997) was an American
philosopher of theutilitarian tradition inmoral philosophy . He spent much of his career at theUniversity of Michigan , together withCharles Stevenson andWilliam K. Frankena (1908-1994), and served as Chairman of the philosophy department. The expressivist moral philosopherAllan Gibbard has mentioned his great intellectual debt to Brandt. [cite book|title="Wise Choices, Apt Feelings"|pages=viii|publisher=Clarendon Press|author=Gibbard, Allan|date=1990|isbn=0198249853]He wrote "Ethical Theory" [cite book|title="Ethical Theory: The Problems of Normative and Critical Ethics"|publisher=Prentice-Hall|author=Richard B. Brandt|date=1959] , an influential textbook in the field. He defended a version of rule-utilitarianism in "Toward a credible form of utilitarianism" (1963) and performed cultural-anthropological studies in "Hopi Ethics" (1954). In "A Theory of the Good and the Right" [cite book|title="A Theory of the Good and the Right"|publisher=Clarendon Press|author=Richard B. Brandt|date=1979|isbn=0198245505] , Brandt proposed a "reforming definition" of
rationality , that one is rational if one's preferences are such that they survivecognitive psychotherapy in terms of all relevant information and logical criticism. He argued also that the morality such rational persons would accept would be a form of utilitarianism.Brandt believed that moral rules should be considered in sets which he called
moral code s. A moral code is justified when it is the optimal code that, if adopted and followed, would maximise the public good more than any alternative code would. The codes may be society-wide standards or special codes for a profession like engineering.References
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