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      The Palgrave Handbook of the Philosophy of Aging 

      Coming to Terms with Old Age – and Death

      other
      Palgrave Macmillan UK

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          The Life Review: An Interpretation of Reminiscence in the Aged

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            Dependence and Autonomy in Old Age

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              Why moral philosophers are not and should not be moral experts.

              Professional philosophers are members of bioethical committees and regulatory bodies in areas of interest to bioethicists. This suggests they possess moral expertise even if they do not exercise it directly and without constraint. Moral expertise is defined, and four arguments given in support of scepticism about their possession of such expertise are considered and rejected: the existence of extreme disagreement between moral philosophers about moral matters; the lack of a means clearly to identify moral experts; that expertise cannot be claimed in that which lacks objectivity; and that ordinary people do not follow the advice of moral experts. I offer a better reason for scepticism grounded in the relation between moral philosophy and common-sense morality: namely that modern moral philosophy views even a developed moral theory as ultimately anchored in common-sense morality, that set of basic moral precepts which ordinary individuals have command of and use to regulate their own lives. Even if moral philosophers do nevertheless have a limited moral expertise, in that they alone can fully develop a set of moral judgments, I sketch reasons - grounded in the values of autonomy and of democracy - why moral philosophers should not wish non-philosophers to defer to their putative expertise. © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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                2016
                December 21 2016
                : 187-206
                10.1057/978-1-137-39356-2_12
                e69a60b2-f94e-47cc-9674-1923028ff94a
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