II
 
A SCIENCE OF PROVISIONAL ETHICS
 
 
 
The aim of ethics is to render scientific—i.e., true, and as far as possible systematic—the apparent cognitions that most men have of the rightness or reasonableness of conduct, whether the conduct be considered as right in itself, or as the means to some end conceived as ultimately reasonable.
 
—Henry Sidgwick, The Methods of Ethics, 1874