Rationalism, Realism, and Relativism: Perspectives in Contemporary Moral Epistemology |
Contents
Moral Reasoning | 17 |
Moral Judgments | 45 |
Moral Rationalism | 74 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
accept action adequate moral system agent argue argument assertion attitude cannibalism claim cognitivism cognitivist concept of morality conceptual relativism conflict courage criticism deductive desires disagreement emotivism entail epistemological Ethics evaluative explanation express factual fallibilism freedom and well-being G. E. M. Anscombe Gert Gert's Gewirth grammatical rules Hare Harman hence human Ibid illocutionary act illocutionary force irrational justified kind logical ments metaethical moral beliefs moral concepts moral discourse moral facts moral features moral grammar moral knowledge moral language moral principles moral properties moral propositions moral realism Moral Relativism moral rules morally wrong noncognitivists nonmoral notion object objectivist particular judgments person philosophers promises question R. M. Hare rational realists relativist requires rules of moral scientific sense sentence set of rules specific standards statements supervenience tell a lie tion true or false truth conditions truth values truth-conditional semantics Wittgenstein Wong Wong's wrong to tell