This article addresses two puzzles, one about the nature of satire and its kinship with moral philosophy and the other about the possibility of practicing philosophy through works of art. While it has long been noted that moral satire and applied ethics share subject matter in common, there has been little attention to the prominence of argument by analogy in satire. This essay shows that satire has a kinship with moral philosophy close enough that it is possible to practice philosophy through satire and thus possible to practice philosophy through works of narrative fiction. © 2013 The American Society for Aesthetics.
CITATION STYLE
Diehl, N. (2013). Satire, analogy, and moral philosophy. Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 71(4), 311–321. https://doi.org/10.1111/jaac.12030
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