Part 1. Perception and Moral Knowledge
Chapter 1. Perception: Sensory, Conceptual, and Cognitive Dimensions
I. Major Kinds of Perception
II. The Phenomenology and Content of Perception
III. The Basis of Veridical Perception
Chapter 2. Moral Perception: Causal, Phenomenological, and Epistemological Elements
I. The Perception of Right and Wrong
II. The Representational Character of Moral Perception
Chapter 3. Perception as a Direct Source of Moral Knowledge
I. Perception and Inference
II. Can Moral Perception Be Naturalized?
III. Moral Perception as a Basis of Moral Knowledge
Part 2. Ethical Intuition, Emotional Sensibility, and Moral Judgment
Chapter 4. Perceptual Grounds, Ethical Disagreement, and Moral Intuitions
I. Does Moral Disagreement Undermine Justification in Ethics?
II. The Concept of an Intuition
III. Intuitions as Apprehensions
Chapter 5. Moral Perception, Aesthetic Perception, and Intuitive Judgment
I. The Role of Intuition in Aesthetic Experience
II. Aesthetic and Moral Properties: Comparison and Contrast
III. The Rule-Governed Element in Ethics and Aesthetics
IV. The Reliability of Intuition
Chapter 6. Emotion and Intuition as Sources of Moral Judgment
I. Emotion and Intuition: Interaction and Integration
II. The Evidential Role of Emotion in Moral Matters
Chapter 7. The Place of Emotion and Moral Intuition in Normative Ethics
I. Emotion and Moral Intuition
II. Moral Imagination as a Nexus of Intuition, Emotion, and Perception
III. Intuition and Moral Judgment
pt. 1. Perception and moral knowledge
pt. 2. Ethical intuition, emotional sensibility and moral judgment.