1 / 13

Expanding Our Mental Map of Philsosophy

Expanding Our Mental Map of Philsosophy. Ethics. Meta- Ethics. Investigation into the foundations of moral claims. A taxonomy. Cognitive Vs. Non-cognitive. Ought a moral claim be considered an ordinary statement capable of having a truth value and truth conditions?

saxton
Télécharger la présentation

Expanding Our Mental Map of Philsosophy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Expanding Our Mental Map of Philsosophy Ethics

  2. Meta- Ethics Investigation into the foundations of moral claims

  3. A taxonomy

  4. Cognitive Vs. Non-cognitive Ought a moral claim be considered an ordinary statement capable of having a truth value and truth conditions? Moral Non-cognitiveists, e.g., Ayer say NO.

  5. Emotivism Moral claims are nothing over and above expressions of emotion. Statements only look as if they could have truth values. On this theory the sentence “Birth Control is bad.” is not literally false, nor could it possibly be true. Instead such sentences should be re-written something like as follows: Birth control, WhooHooo!!!! Or, Birth control, Barf!!!! Depending on your emotional response.

  6. Prescriptivism Prescriptivists claim that it is possible to make a recommendation about behaviors without implying that there is any particular ontological significant ground for that prescription. One can provide a list of, for instance, 10 commandments without thereby implying that the commandments of behaviors comports with ‘goodness’.

  7. Expressivism Can be seen as a type of prescriptivism tied to community standard. Moral claims are expressions of allegiance to governing norms of conduct such as a constitution or laws.

  8. Consider the Cognitivists Response. What does it take for a moral claim to have a truth value? What is the reference of sentences with the word Good in them? What does Good refer to ?

  9. Moral Subjectivism The truth of every moral claim is determined by Me! Truthmaker: It is my attitude, a cognitive state, which makes those sentences true or false.

  10. Intersubjectivism The truth of a moral claim is determined by a collective, namely the community in which I reside. Difficulty: what constitutes a community? How do you compare communities with different values?

  11. Objectivism Truth values of moral claims are determined by reference to moral properties of persons or states of affairs or possible states of affairs. Problem: Do moral properties exist? Is their existence independent of individual or group preferences? Moral realism says yes. Moral anti-realism says, if such properties do not exist, then it’s like talking about the present king of the United States….and so false or neither true nor false depending on your semantic theory.

  12. Ethics In the previous section we looked at how to think about Moral theories. Now, we want to look at some of the historically important theories on offer.

More Related