Philosophy 1332 Notes OSU
Philosophy 1332 Notes OSU
Philosophy 1332 Notes OSU
Chapter 21
Ethical Objectivism:
It means that moral exists, applies to everybody, independent of everything. There is right and wrong,
we just have to find them.
The 11 Arguments:
1. Objectivity requires absolutism:
If moral claims are objectively true, then they will always be true.
Ex: lying is good as well as bad.
Morals can be objective, but they cannot be absolute.
a. If everyone has an equal right to an opinion, then all opinions are equally plausible.
b. Everyone has an equal right to his or her moral opinions.
c. Therefore, all moral opinions are equally plausible.
d. If all moral opinions are equally plausible, then ethical objectivism is false.
e. Therefore, ethical objectivism is false.
Counterargument: Not all moral opinions are equally plausible. But moral objectivism can still exist.
Ex: “You have cancer” said by a doctor and by a beggar.
a. Tolerance is valuable only if the moral views of different people are equally plausible.
b. If ethical objectivism is true, then the moral views of different people are not equally
plausible.
c. Therefore, if ethical objectivism is true, then tolerance is not valuable.
Counterargument:
a. If all moral views are equally plausible, then moral views supporting tolerance and those
supporting intolerance are equally plausible.
b. These moral views are not equally plausible.
c. Therefore, some moral views are less plausible than others.
Chapter 5: Morality and Religion
Euthyphro Argument:
1. Either God has reasons that support His commands, or God lacks reasons for His commands.
2. If God lacks reasons for His commands, then God's commands are arbitrary, and that renders
God imperfect, undermining His moral authority.
3. If God has reasons that support His commands, then these reasons, rather than the divine
commands, are what make actions right or wrong, thereby refuting the Divine Command
Theory.
4. Therefore, either God is imperfect, or the Divine Command Theory is false.
5. God is not imperfect.
6. Therefore, the Divine Command Theory is false.
God is like a thermometer. God did not create morality, rather He understands everything and
commands what things are right and what are wrong.
Worries:
1. Non-religious people will have to look elsewhere to find moral guidance.
2. Those people are doing the correct thing because God may not exist.
3. God may exist, but not offer us any help.
Chapter 19: Ethical Relativism
Moral Equivalence
Everyone’s basic moral views are equally plausible in individual relativism. Group relativism will deny
that everyone’s moral views are equally plausible. Example: Hitler.
Moral Progress
The problem for group and individual relativism is that it can’t make sense of the most basic kind of
moral progress. If a person’s or a society’s deepest beliefs are true by definition, then they cannot
change for the better. They can change, but no change would mark moral improvement. This is because
each moral view is equally plausible, and there is no right and wrong.
Individual Relativism and Problem of Contradiction
Since every person has a right to their opinion, contradicting views on the same matter leads to a
contradiction. If there is a contradiction in a theory, then it becomes false. So, ethical relativism will
become false. But to counter this counterargument, relativists say that when people talk about their
view, they mean “according to me”, and then, there is no contradiction. People are just stating their
own opinions.
Individualism is unable to explain the existence of moral disagreement. If everyone is stating their own
opinions, then nobody is wrong. It now becomes impossible for people to morally disagree with one
another.
Ideal Observers
They can survey the moral scene more knowledgeably and more rationally. They are better suited to
inventing the moral law than we mortal individuals are.
An act becomes morally right just because I favor it if I were fully informed and perfectly rational.
Then the moral disagreements between individuals and groups disappear as we have authoritative
endorsements. Moral progress will be possible, as groups and individuals reach closer to the ideal
observer.
Fact-value Distinction
Nihilists believe in facts, but not in values. Value claims cannot be factual/proven, so they are false. Facts
inform us of something, values don’t.
Error Theory
Error theory is not a moral theory. Error theory is a metaphysical theory, which is a theory about what
the world is truly like, and what really exists. Other example is theism. Error theorists claim that our
moral judgments are always mistaken.
Claims:
1. There are no moral features in this world.
2. No moral judgments are true.
3. Our sincere moral judgments try, and always fail, to describe the moral features of things.
4. There is no moral knowledge.
Basically, morality is a fiction.
Error theory => Morality is same as Atheists => Religion
Categorical reasons: reasons that apply to us regardless of whether acting on them will get us what we
want.
If error theory is correct, then people will abandon morality, which will lead to terrible results.
We are not trying to report the moral features possessed by various actions, motives or policies. Instead,
we are just venting our emotions, commanding others to act in certain ways, or revealing a plan of
action. Example: torture -> disgust.
Different from ethical theory: expressivism doesn’t say if torture is true or false; it just expresses its
emotions toward it.
It also doesn’t have a problem with contradiction, unlike group and individual relativism. Of expressivists
are right, no moral claim is either true or false, so moral contradictions disappear.
Worries: