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Emotivism. Rachel Petrik Based on writing by A.J. Ayer. A.J. Ayer. 20 th century English philosopher Wrote Language, Truth, and Logic in 1936 Established himself as leading English rep of Logical Positivism. Logical Positivism. Also called logical empiricism
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Emotivism Rachel Petrik Based on writing by A.J. Ayer
A.J. Ayer • 20th century English philosopher • Wrote Language, Truth, and Logic in 1936 • Established himself as leading English rep of Logical Positivism
Logical Positivism • Also called logical empiricism • Empiricism= concepts originate in experience and propositions are justifiable only through experience • View that scientific knowledge is the only kind of factual knowledge • Metaphysical statements are not factual
Emotivism • Teaches that moral statements: • Are meaningless • Only express the speaker’s feelings about the issue • Later emotivists added the idea that moral statements are used to influence another person’s thoughts and conduct by informing them of the speaker’s feelings
Moral Statements • Does not literally spell out the speaker’s feelings • Expresses feelings, approval, or disapproval with emotive force • Similar to connotation • The overtones of feeling that a word arouses • Separate from its literal meaning • Is the difference between conveying information and appealing to feelings
Ayer’s Ideas and Principles • All meaningful statements are analytic (true by definition) or synthetic (deriving meaning from being empirically verifiable) • Called the Verification Principle • Ethical terms cannot be translated into statements of empirical fact • The inability to translate into empirical fact makes them unverifiable • Ethical statements are synthetic, not analytic • Therefore, moral facts do not exist
Cannot adopt a subjectivist or utilitarian analysis of ethical terms • Utilitarian: rightness and goodness in terms of pleasure or happiness that result • Subjectivist: approval of the action from a certain person or group • Belongs to psychology or sociology, not philosophy • These two views cannot be absolute • To accept absolute view, recognize ethical concepts are irreducible to empirical concepts • Therefore ethics do not derive from observation • Instead from intellectual intuition • No criterion to decide between conflicting intuitions
Ethical concepts are pseudo-concepts • Ethical or moral statement does not add factual content to a proposition • Simply evincing moral approval or disapproval • A proposition only containing ethical symbols has no factual meaning
Evaluating Emotivism • The verification principle appears to be synthetic, but not empirically verifiable • There are moral disagreements • Yet if there is no reason or fact behind moral statements, why do we argue? • Seems possible to judge something to be morally wrong without having any emotional reaction to it
Summary • Emotivism is not a widely accepted theory today • Most philosophers think moral statements are more than just expressions of feeling