J. L. Mackie
John Leslie Mackie (25 August 1917 – 12 December 1981) was an Australian
philosopher. He made significant contributions to
ethics, the
philosophy of religion,
metaphysics, and the
philosophy of language. Mackie had influential views on
metaethics, including his defence of
moral scepticism and his sophisticated defence of
atheism. He wrote six books. His most widely known, ''
Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong'' (1977), opens by boldly stating, "There are no objective values." It goes on to argue that because of this,
ethics must be invented rather than discovered.
His posthumously published ''The Miracle of Theism: Arguments For and Against the Existence of God'' (1982) has been called ''a'' ''tour de force'' in contemporary analytic philosophy. The atheist philosopher
Kai Nielsen described it as "one of the most, probably the most, distinguished articulation of an atheistic point of view given in the twentieth century." In 1980, ''
Time'' magazine described him as "perhaps the ablest of today's atheistic philosophers".
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