1st Edition

The Origin of Our Knowledge of Right and Wrong

By Franz Brentano Copyright 2026
274 Pages
by Routledge

274 Pages
by Routledge

274 Pages
by Routledge

"Is there such a thing as a moral truth taught by nature itself and independent of ecclesiastical, political, and every other kind of social authority? Is there a moral law that is natural in the sense of being universally and incontestably valid—valid for men at all places and all times, indeed valid for any being that thinks and feels—and are we capable of knowing that there is such a law? ...... Read more

Brentano's Life and Works Uriah Kriegel

Foreword to the Routledge Classics Edition Uriah Kriegel

Preface to the English Edition Roderick M. Chisholm

Author's Preface

The Lecture: The Origin of Our Knowledge of Right and Wrong

Supplementary Notes

Appendices

Excerpt from Brentano’s The Foundation and Construction of Ethics

Introduction to the 1934 German edition of The Origin of Our Knowledge of Right and Wrong Oskar Kraus (translated by Roderick M. Chisholm and Elizabeth H. Schneewind)

Review of The Origin of Our Knowledge of Right and Wrong G.E. Moore.

Index

Biography

Franz Brentano (1838–1917) was a pivotal figure in the development of twentieth-century philosophy and the advent of psychology as an academic discipline. His work influenced philosophers as diverse as Edmund Husserl, the founder of phenomenology and the philosopher and logician Gottlob Frege.