born April 15, 1877, Thurso, Caithness, Scot. died May 5, 1971 in full William David Ross Scottish rationalistic moral philosopher and critic of utilitarianism who proposed a form of cognitivist nondefinitism based on intuitional knowledge rather than naturalism. He distinguished his views from Kantian philosophy by subscribing to an ethic of obligation that depended more on immediate knowledge and belief than on objective absolutes. By claiming that duty was intuitive, he suggested that good, which pertains to motives, and right, which pertains to acts, are indefinable and irreducible terms. Schooled in the classics at the University of Edinburgh and Balliol College, Oxford, Ross gained recognition as an Aristotelian scholar by editing the Oxford English translations of Aristotle (190831); he translated the Metaphysics (1908) and Ethica Nicomachea (1925) himself. Ross's notable academic and public career included his rise from lecturer to provost at Oriel College (190247), his appointment as vice-chancellor of Oxford University (194144), president of the Union Acadmique Internationale (1947), chairman of the Royal Commission on the Press (194749), and his knighthood in 1938 for outstanding munitions work during World War I. Among his writings are Aristotle (1923), The Right and the Good (1930), Foundations of Ethics (1939), Plato's Theory of Ideas (1951), and Kant's Ethical Theory (1954).
ROSS, SIR DAVID
Meaning of ROSS, SIR DAVID in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012