Meta ethics Flashcards
What is meta ethics?
It analyses the reasoning behind ethical language and moral term such as ‘good’ and ‘right’.
What are the two main forms of meta ethics?
- Cognitivism- moral truths exist independently of the mind, they can be true/false and terms such as ‘right’ correspond to facts in the world. 2. Non-cognitivism- there is no such thing as a moral truth, moral facts are subjective emotional responses.
Explain the fact-value distinction
A fact is a statement which can be true/false ‘there are two people in the room.’ A value is a belief, judgment or attitude ‘killing is always wrong.’
What is the difference between realism and anti realism?
- Cognitivists are moral realists, this holds that certain actions are right/wrong and moral judgments can be objective moral facts. 2. Non-cognitivists are moral anti-realists, moral facts don’t exist and are subjective.
Describe Hume’s is-ought gap
Deriving what ought to be done from what is the case is an example of false deduction.
What is the non-cognitivist position on the is-ought gap?
We can’t reason from a statement of fact to one of value. Values aren’t in the world, they are just emotional responses to the world.
Describe the cognitivist position on the is-ought gap
Morality is attached to certain facts that all people share. We can discover it through reason and experience. This idea can justify moral progress and moral truth.
What is naturalism?
It is cognitive and realist, it argues that there are moral principles in the world. Terms such as ‘good’ can be understood in natural terms.
What do naturalists think about the Good?
It is a natural property of the world and we can infer from this property what the Good actually is.
What is Mill’s argument that the utilitarian understanding of human nature is the origin of morality?
P1. The aim of our desires is happiness. P2. Things are desirable as people desire them in the same way that sounds are audible insofar as people hear them. P3. Personal happiness is a good to each person. P4. As society is the sum of individual interests, general happiness is a good for this sum of interests. P5. Ergo, the Good is happiness.
How does Mill see the Good?
When he refers to it, he is referring to morality as a whole, the Good is not transcendent, it is something derived from out very nature as animals.
Give two strengths of ethical naturalism based on moral feelings and moral disagreements
- It accounts for moral feelings when we feel outraged by an injustice- it gives us pain, which makes us unhappy and naturally leads to the fact that it’s morally wrong. 2. It accounts for moral disagreements, if we think of the consequences of our actions in terms of pleasure/pain, we can decide what is morally right.
Give two more strengths of ethical naturalism based on moral language and how people understand morality
- It explains how we use moral language, when we make moral judgments, we state them as facts and imply that they represent something about the nature of reality. 2. We all value pleasure over pain, so it makes sense that the Good is pleasure.
What is the problem with ethical naturalism?
It commits reductionism as it reduces moral judgments to natural facts about the world. It also fails to distinguish between facts and values and implies that an ought can be derived from an is.
How does G.E. Moore criticize the naturalist position?
He takes a cognitivist position, but argues that morality can’t be reduced to a natural property of the world. He criticizes the naturalist position because it defines the Good as a natural property and holds that you can infer what is moral from such premises.
What is Moore’s open question argument?
If the Good was pleasure, then the answer to ‘is the Good pleasure?’ Would be so obvious that it would simply require a ‘yes’ or ‘no’, it would be a closed question. The issue is that this is not the case. Therefor, the Good is not pleasure.
Explain the difference between an open question and a closed question
A closed question is one which can be answered with a simple yes or no, or from an answer derived from a limited number of possibilities. An open question can have any number of answers.
What is Moore’s naturalistic fallacy?
Any attempt to define goodness leads to the naturalistic fallacy, when a non natural object is given natural properties.