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Moral truth: relational properties

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Title: Moral truth: relational properties


1
Moral truth relational properties
  • Michael Lacewing
  • enquiries_at_alevelphilosophy.co.uk

2
The is-ought gap
  • (Natural) facts do not entail moral judgments
  • Hume this oughtexpresses some new relation of
    which it seems altogether inconceivable, how
    this new relation can be a deduction from others,
    which are entirely different from it.
  • Explanation morality is not a matter of fact,
    but of attitude

3
Emotivism and disagreement
  • A J Ayer when two people disagree over a fact,
    the matter can be resolved (or at least, we know
    what would resolve it) when two people disagree
    over a value judgment, either they disagree over
    a (natural) fact, or there is no further way to
    resolve the disagreement.
  • Moral judgments express feelings of
    approval/disapproval.

4
Moral reasoning
  • But when justifying a moral claim
  • E.g. Eating meat is wrong
  • we appeal to natural facts
  • E.g. Animals suffer.
  • Moral reason a reason for someone to do
    something
  • E.g. That animals suffer is a reason for you to
    not eat meat.
  • That some fact is a moral reason is a relational
    property.

5
Moral truth
  • Whether some fact is a reason is objectively true
    or false.
  • Epistemic reasons Radiometric decay indicates
    that the some dinosaur bones are 65 million years
    old. This is (objectively) a reason to believe
    that dinosaurs lived on Earth 65 million years
    ago.
  • Facts about reasons are normative facts.

6
Moral truth
  • To say that something is wrong is to say that the
    moral reasons against doing it are stronger than
    any moral reason in favour of doing it.
  • The judgment, x is wrong, is objectively true
    or false.
  • Hume is right that natural facts do not establish
    moral truths. We must also consider the normative
    facts.

7
Are moral reasons objective?
  • How can something that is relational be
    objective?
  • Many facts depend on us and how we are, e.g.
    whether a piece of music is baroque or classical.
  • Aristotle There are also facts about what we
    need in order to flourish.
  • But moral reasons are relative to individuals
    whether the fact that animals suffer is a reason
    for me not to eat meat depends on whether I care

8
Two views of attitudes
  • Blackburn our judgments about what reasons we
    have are a reflection of our attitudes, not a
    description of independent normative facts.
  • Scanlon our attitudes are reflections of our
    judgments about reasons, they are
    judgment-sensitive.

9
Primary and secondary qualities
  • Primary qualities properties of an object that
    are not related by definition to perceivers, e.g.
    size, mass, and shape (scientific account of the
    world)
  • Secondary qualities properties that are related
    to perceivers, e.g. colour and smell (commonsense
    account)
  • Hume secondary qualities are mind-dependent

10
The analogy with secondary qualities
  • Hume when you pronounce any action or character
    to be vicious, you mean nothing, but that you
    have a feeling of blame from the contemplation
    of it. Vice and virtue, therefore, may be
    compard to sounds, colours, heat and cold,
    which are not qualities in objects, but
    perceptions in the mind
  • Moral judgments (and talk about moral reasons)
    are, ultimately, expressions of our feelings and
    what we care about

11
A cognitivist response
  • McDowell secondary qualities are properties of
    the object that enable it to cause certain
    experiences in us.
  • Colour is relational, but objective To be brown
    is to look brown to normal perceivers under
    normal conditions.
  • Moral judgments are relative to human responses,
    but are not subjective.
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