IntroductionSection 1. Of the Moral Sense by which we perceive Virtue and Vice, and approve or disapprove them in othersSection 2. Concerning the immediate Motive to virtuous ActionsSection 3. The Sense of Virtue, and the various Opinions about it, reducible to one general Foundation. The Manner of computing the Morality of ActionsSection 4. All Mankind agree in this general Foundation of their Approbation of moral Actions. The Grounds of the different Opinions about MoralsSection 5. A farther Confirmation that we have practical Dispositions to Virtue implanted in our Nature; with a farther Explication of our Instinct to Benevolence in its various Degrees; with the additional Motives of Interest, viz. Honour, Shame and PitySection 6. Concerning the Importance of this moral Sense to the present Happiness of Mankind, and its Influence of human AffairsSection 7. A Deduction of some Complex moral Ideas, viz: of Obligation, and Right, Perfect, Imperfect, and External, Alienable, and Unalienable, from this moral Sense