Meta-Ethics Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 types of Meta-Ethics?

A
  • Naturalism
  • Intuitionism
  • Emotivism
    ——– not on syllabus
  • Prescriptivism
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2
Q

What is Meta-Ethics?

A

Discussing the nature and validity of ethical statements

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3
Q

Cognitive Vs. Non-Cognitive

A

Cognitive
- Objective - not influenced by personal feelings e.g. ‘murder is wrong’ - be deduced by effects of action
- Moral statements describing the world
- Naturalism + Intuitionism

Non-Cognitive
- Subjective
- Not true or false - expression of a feeling

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4
Q

What did David Hume think about Meta-Ethics

A
  • Hume –> Empiricist
    – >only real/ meaningful things are those that can be verified by 5 senses
  • is-ought fallacy - problem people make when they try to make statements about what ‘ought’ to be from what ‘is’

+ Hume’s two pronged fork
- Synthetic - empiricism - a priori - necessarily
- Analytic - rationalism - a posteriori - contingently true

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5
Q

What is Hume’s fork?

A

David Hume

Two prongs
- Synthetic - empiricism - a priori - necessarily
- Analytic - rationalism - a posteriori - contingently true

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6
Q

Who are the main Scholars for Naturalist approach? (Ethical Naturalism)

A
  • Philippa Foot, F.H. Bradley
    criticism
  • G.E. Moore
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7
Q

What does Philippa Foot say about Meta-Ethics?

A
  • Modern Day virtue ethicist
  • Moral Evil as a ‘natural defect’
    –> there are certain norms based on self-maintenance and reproduction in each species - e.g. own has night vision
    –> Humans norm of moral behaviour - people who act immorally have a natural defect
  • There are moral absolutes
    –> recognise virtues by observing how person acts in consideration of them e.g. honest person act in consideration of honesty
    –> see moral absolutes empiricists argue cannot measure
    (inspired by Aristotle)
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8
Q

What do difference scholars say good means (Meta-Ethics)

A
  • Natural law -Aquinas- from divine inspiration - God
  • Utilitarianism - Mill + Bentham- good from pleasure
  • Kant - good from sense of duty
    –> all good as natural sense, can reason whats good
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9
Q

What is the Naturalist approach?

A

Cognitivism - Moral Absolutists
- Believe ethical statement are facts
- All attempt to explain moral terms (good/bad/right/wrong) in a non-moral (factual) way

  • Bradley + Philippa Foot
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10
Q

Criticism of Naturalist approach?

A

Hume
- is-ought fallacy
–> cant go from ‘is’ observations about humans to statements about what ‘ought’ to be
–> cant move from descriptive to prescriptive statements

G.E. Moore
- Naturalistic fallacy - trying to define intrinsic goodness
- Any quality we attempt to define as good, ask “is that property itself good” e.g. is pleasure itself good
–> open question, if question makes sense proves its not identical e.g. is goodness itself good doesn’t make sense

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11
Q

Who are the main scholars of intuitionism?

A
  • G.E. Moore
  • H.A. Prichard
  • W.D. Ross
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12
Q

What does G.E. Moore say about Meta-Ethics?

A

Intuitionism
- Intrinsically good things exist for their own sake –> should do things that cause the most good to exists
- Good as indefinable

Simple Vs. Complex
- simple - yellow, Complex - horse

Naturalistc Fallacy
- attempt to define good in terms of something else e.g. pleasure
- “Good is Good, and that is the end of the matter”
- Good as simple notion

Intuition
- intuition to perceive moral goodness , not senses
- Cannot be evidence based or viewed, intution cannot be measured empirically

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13
Q
A
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