meta - 3. Assess whether or not ethical terms such as good, bad, right and wrong, have an objective factual basis that makes them true or false in describing something Flashcards

1
Q

intro

A
  • These ethical terms are objective and are true or false when describing something
  • Supported by naturalism
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2
Q

paragraph 1

A
  • Naturalism argues that ethical terms such as good bad right and wrong can be observed and are cognitive
  • Aquinas – the world has God-given natural order that we can discover through observation and reasoning
  • There are moral absolutist fixed truths about the world
  • Is a strong argument as there is agreement of moral values throughout the world, this is not a matter of opinion it is factual truth.
  • Example of this is saying that bricks are solid and not a liquid or a gas – these are undeniable truths this is the same when you consider ethical terms
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3
Q

paragraph 2

A
  • On the other had can be argued from an emotivist point of view (A.J Ayer) where these words as simply an expression of emotion and are therefore not meaningful – as a result are neither true or false
  • There is no factual value added when you use words such as wrong
  • SUCCESSFUL COUNTER, removes naturalistic fallacy’s as there is no link to the world
  • Also, there are no facts when considering this language these are solely feelings and attitudes
  • There is no truth value in these statements they are subjective (COUNTERS THE TRUTH VALUE AQUINAS SAYS THAT THERE IS)
  • Example – if you say that you are wrong to lie – wrong adds no factual value
  • You are simply expressing your opinion that lying (in this situation is wrong)
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4
Q

paragraph 3

A
  • NOT SUCCESSFUL, this reduces ethical discussions to a matter of opinion
  • EXAMPLE, killing is wrong is not comparable to a discussion around food
  • They must be objective and true/ false to be able to understand ethical debates
  • Supported by Philippa Foot – example of a concentration camp and therefore cannot be right
    - There are significant debates that can’t be reduced to opinion
  • Debates become futile if you are using ‘boo-hurray’ theory and attitude to discussing ethics
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5
Q

conclusion

A
  • These words do have and objective factual basis that makes them true and false
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