"Most moralists, and certainly all those of a religious persuasion, think that pupils should be “taught values” at school, not mainly so that they can apply them in thinking about the implications of science, history and other subjects, but to make them behave in ways that they (the moralists) find acceptable. But the point of equipping people to think about ethics is not to impose some partisan set of principles upon them, but to develop their powers of reflection, and to inform them of possibilities and options so that they can think for themselves."
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Cultural criticsSocial criticsPhilosophers from the United KingdomLogicians from the United KingdomUniversity of Oxford faculty
Original Language: English
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Chapter 60, “Values and Knowledge” (p. 236)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/A._C._Grayling
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A. C. Grayling
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