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1. Early twentieth-century intuitionism
Henry Sidgwick: three kinds of ethical intuitionism
G.E. Moore as a philosophical intuitionist
H.A. Prichard and the reassertion of dogmatic intuitionism
C.D. Broad and the concept of fittingness
W.D. Ross and the theory of prima facie duty
Intuitions, intuitionism, and reflection
2. Rossian intuitionism as a contemporary ethical theory
The Rossian appeal to self-evidence
Two types of self-evidence
Resources and varieties of moderate intuitionism
Disagreement, incommensurability, and the charge of dogmatism
Intuitive moral judgment and rational action
3. Kantian intuitionism
The possibility of systematizing Rossian principles
A Kantian integration of intuitionist principles
Kantian intuitionism as a development of Kantian ethics
Between the middle axioms and moral decision: the multiple grounds of obligation
4. Rightness and goodness
Intrinsic value and the grounding of reasons for action
Intrinsic value and prima facie duty
The autonomy of ethics
Deontological constraints and agent-relative reasons
The unity problem for intuitionist ethics
5. Intuitionism in normative ethics
Five methods in normative ethical reflection
The need for middle theorems
Some dimensions of beneficence
Toward a comprehensive intuitionist ethics.

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