Hi everyone,

This week's speaker in the University of Sydney Philosophy Seminar Series is 
Melissa Merritt, (University of New South Wales)

The title of the talk is "Murdoch on Moral Activity and the Gospels as Art". 
Here is an abstract for the talk:

This paper examines two theses from the philosophy of Iris Murdoch. The first 
is her view (developed especially in The Sovereignty of Good) that moral 
activity is centrally a matter of love, conceived as infinitely perfectible 
“knowledge of the individual”. What is philosophically distinctive in her 
thesis, I suggest, turns on her conception of the singularity of the activity 
itself — that it can only ever be done “alone and differently” (61). The second 
is Murdoch’s claim that “art is … a case of morals” with respect to the 
discipline of attention, or love, that it properly involves (58). These ideas 
remain difficult and provocative, despite their role in reshaping ethics in 
what have become familiar, even mainstream, ways. I re-examine them in light of 
Murdoch’s avowed debt to “the Christian ethic, whose centre is an individual” 
(28). The Gospels narrate the life of Jesus, an individual who loved 
individuals: so do the Gospels present moral activity as Murdoch understands 
this – and if so, how? I suggest that the answer is tied to the question of 
whether we can read them as art. I draw on Murdoch’s conception of moral 
activity to consider the aesthetically and theologically delicate status of the 
Gospels as art. I conclude by looking more closely at the representation of 
love in the Gospels as a way to bring to light what might justify Murdoch’s 
placement of love at the centre of human goodness.

The seminar will take place at 3:30pm on Wednesday Sep 17 in the Philosophy 
Seminar Room (N494).

Enquiries about the seminar series can be directed to [email protected]

Ryan Cox
Lecturer in Philosophy
Discipline of Philosophy
School of Humanities
University of Sydney
[email protected]
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