A foundational work of moral philosophy and theological reflection, Human Nature and Other Sermons presents Joseph Butler's influential analysis of conscience, virtue, and the structure of human motivation. Delivered with clarity and restraint, these sermons move beyond conventional preaching to offer a sustained argument about the nature of ethical life, grounding moral behaviour in an internal principle of conscience rather than external rule alone.
Butler's central insight lies in his account of human nature as an ordered system, in which self-love, benevolence, and conscience each play distinct roles. Rather than rejecting self-interest, he integrates it within a broader moral framework, arguing that true harmony arises when conscience governs the whole. His reasoning stands in quiet opposition to more reductive views of human behaviour, insisting on the legitimacy of moral intuition and the reality of ethical obligation.
The sermons have had a lasting impact on both philosophy and theology, influencing later thinkers concerned with moral psychology and ethical theory. Their style-measured, logical, and cumulative-reflects Butler's commitment to persuasion through reason rather than rhetoric. For readers interested in the development of moral philosophy, Anglican theology, and the intellectual history of ethics, this work remains of enduring significance.
Related Subjects
Fiction Literature & Fiction Religion Religion & Spirituality Social Science Social Sciences