Morality and Epistemic Judgement
The Argument From Analogy
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:23rd Oct '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Moral judgments attempt to describe a reality that does not exist, so they are all false. This is the moral error theory, a deeply troubling yet plausible view that is now one of the canonical positions in moral philosophy. The most compelling argument against it is the argument from analogy. According to this, the moral error theory should be rejected because it would seriously compromise our practice of making epistemic judgments-judgments about how we ought to form and revise our beliefs in light of our evidence-and could undermine systematic thought and reason themselves. Christopher Cowie provides a novel assessment of the recent attention paid to this topic in moral philosophy and epistemology. He reasons that the argument from analogy fails because moral judgments are unlike judgments about how we ought to form and revise our beliefs in light of our evidence. On that basis, a moral error theory does not compromise the practice of making epistemic judgments. The moral error theory may be true after all, Cowie concludes, and if it is then we will simply have to live with its concerning consequences.
Readers interested in meta-normativity would do well to read it both to navigate the explosion of meta-normativity literature and as an example of numerous authorial virtues -- clarity, precision, thoroughness and more. * Alex Murphy, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice *
ISBN: 9780198842736
Dimensions: 219mm x 143mm x 19mm
Weight: 432g
246 pages