
Published online:
24 January 2013
Published in print:
07 September 2012
Online ISBN:
9780199980093
Print ISBN:
9780199895595
Contents
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6.1 The Mapping Function 6.1 The Mapping Function
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6.2 Curved Mapping Functions 6.2 Curved Mapping Functions
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6.3 Revisiting the Sym Mountain 6.3 Revisiting the Sym Mountain
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6.4 Revisiting the V Shaped Skyline 6.4 Revisiting the V Shaped Skyline
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6.5 Further Constraints on the Skyline 6.5 Further Constraints on the Skyline
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6.6 The Logical Limits of Bell Motion 6.6 The Logical Limits of Bell Motion
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6.7 Disaggregation 6.7 Disaggregation
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Cite
Kagan, Shelly, 'Placing Peaks', The Geometry of Desert (New York , 2012; online edn, Oxford Academic, 24 Jan. 2013), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199895595.003.0006, accessed 5 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter focuses on peaks, a concept which was introduced in a previous chapter. The first section deals with the absolute desert mapping function, which records certain levels of vice or virtue and maps them on specific assignments of absolute desert. This is followed by a discussion of curved mapping functions and a review of the Sym Mountain. The chapter then attempts to distinguish the line between positive and negative peaks and the line between vice and virtue. It also reviews the V shaped skyline and introduces the logical limits of bell motion. The chapter ends with a study of the disaggregationist approach.
Keywords:
peaks, absolute desert, mapping function, vice and virtue, curved mapping functions, Sym Mountain, V shaped skyline, bell motion, logical limits, disaggregationist approach
Subject
Moral Philosophy
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
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