356 results on '"Moral skepticism"'
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2. Deontological Skeptical Theism Proved
- Author
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Hendricks, Perry, Nagasawa, Yujin, Series Editor, Wielenberg, Erik J., Series Editor, and Hendricks, Perry
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Axiological Skeptical Theism Proved
- Author
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Hendricks, Perry, Nagasawa, Yujin, Series Editor, Wielenberg, Erik J., Series Editor, and Hendricks, Perry
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Reconsidering the Alien Doctor Analogy: a challenge to skeptical theism.
- Author
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Tucker, Luke
- Subjects
- *
THEISM , *APORIA , *DUTY - Abstract
The claim that skeptical theism induces moral paralysis or aporia (known as the moral paralysis objection) has been extensively discussed. In this context, Stephen Maitzen has introduced the Alien Doctor Analogy, an intriguing case that he employs to advance the moral paralysis objection. Michael Rea, however, has criticized the analogy for portraying the skeptical theist uncharitably. In this essay, I argue that Maitzen and Rea are both incorrect: the Alien Doctor Analogy is flawed indeed, but because it portrays the skeptical theist too charitably. I modify the analogy to remedy this flaw. I then use the analogy to advance an original version of the moral paralysis objection. Specifically, I contend that skeptical theists, whenever they encounter apparently gratuitous evil that they could prevent, should be convinced by what I call the "God-Knows-Best Argument," which always concludes that they should refrain from intervening. Thus, skeptical theism does induce moral paralysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Moral knowledge and the existence of god.
- Author
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McKay, Noah D.
- Subjects
- *
GOD , *NATURALISM , *HUMAN beings , *NATURAL theology , *REALISM - Abstract
In this essay, I argue that, all else being equal, theism is more probable than naturalism on the assumption that human beings are able to arrive at a body of moral knowledge that is largely accurate and complete. I put forth this thesis on grounds that, if naturalism is true, the explanation of the content of our moral intuitions terminates either in biological-evolutionary processes or in social conventions adopted for pragmatic reasons; that, if this is so, our moral intuitions were selected for their utility, not their truth; and that, if our moral intuitions were so selected, they are probably false. I defend the argument against three objections: first, that the argument amounts to a generic skeptical challenge; second, that ethical naturalism explains how our moral intuitions could have been selected for their truth; and third, that there is a pre-established harmony between the utility of moral beliefs and their truth-values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Madhyamaka Metaethics.
- Author
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Dockstader, Jason
- Abstract
This paper develops two novel views that help solve the 'now what' problem for moral error theorists concerning what they should do with morality once they accept it is systematically false. It does so by reconstructing aspects of the metaethical and metanormative reflections found in the Madhyamaka Buddhist, and in particular the Prāsaṅgika Madhyamaka Buddhist, tradition. It also aims to resolve the debate among contemporary scholars of Madhyamaka Buddhism concerning the precise metaethical status of its views, namely, whether Madhyamaka Buddhism can count as a genuine moral skepticism. The paper argues that Mādhyamikas are indeed moral skeptics, and moral skeptics more in a 'Pyrrhonian,' or quietist, sense if one follows the Prāsaṅgika line of thinkers. Overall, the claim is that Prāsaṅgika Madhyamaka Buddhists treat morality and normativity more broadly as a source of suffering to be ultimately overcome for therapeutic reasons. They propose to do this by abolishing fully asserting genuine moral and normative beliefs while also occasionally passively and reactively pretending some normative judgments are true when it appears doing so would be salutary. These two approaches are called 'nonassertive moral abolitionism' and 'reactionary moral fictionalism,' respectively. They are developed and offered to contemporary error theorists willing to consider a non-normative and non-collectivist criterion for solving the 'now what' problem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. That seems wrong: pedagogically defusing moral relativism and moral skepticism
- Author
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Licon, Jimmy Alfonso
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- 2023
- Full Text
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8. Evolution and the possibility of moral knowledge
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Wittwer, Silvan, Chrisman, Matthew, Pritchard, Duncan, and Sayre-Mccord, Geoffrey
- Subjects
121 ,evolutionary debunking ,robust moral realism ,moral objectivity ,moral skepticism ,moral epistemology - Abstract
This PhD thesis provides an extended evaluation of evolutionary debunking arguments in meta-ethics. Such arguments attempt to show that evolutionary theory, together with a commitment to robust moral objectivity, lead to moral scepticism: the implausible view that we lack moral knowledge or that our moral beliefs are never justified (e.g. Joyce 2006, Street 2005, Kahane 2011). To establish that, these arguments rely on certain epistemic principles. But most of the epistemic principles appealed to in the literature on evolutionary debunking arguments are imprecise, confused or simply implausible. My PhD aims to rectify that. Informed by debates in cutting-edge contemporary epistemology, Chapter 1 distinguishes three general, independently motivated principles that, combined with evolution, seem to render knowledge of robustly objective moral facts problematic. These epistemic principles state that (i.) our getting facts often right in a given domain requires explanation - and if we cannot provide one, our beliefs about that domain are unjustified; (ii.) higher-order evidence of error undermines justification; and (iii.) for our beliefs to be justified, our having them must be best explained by the facts they are about. Chapters 2-4 develop and critically assess evolutionary debunking arguments based on those principles, showing that only the one inspired by (iii.) succeeds. Chapter 2 investigates the argument that evolution makes explaining why we get moral facts often right impossible. I argue that Justin Clarke-Doane's recent response (2014, 2015, 2016, 2017) works, yet neglects an issue about epistemic luck that spells trouble for robust moral objectivity. Chapter 3 discusses the argument that evolution provides higher-order evidence of error regarding belief in robustly objective moral facts. I show that such an argument falls prey to Katia Vavova's (2014) self-defeat objection, even if evolutionary debunkers tweak their background view on the epistemic significance of higher-order evidence. Chapter 4 develops the argument that evolution, rather than robustly objective moral facts, best explains why we hold our moral beliefs. I offer a systematic, comprehensive defence of that argument against Andreas Mogensen's (2015) charge of explanatory levels confusion, Terrence Cuneo's (2007) companion in guilt strategy, and David Enoch's (2012, 2016) appeal to deliberative indispensability. Chapter 5 brings everything together. It investigates whether robust moral objectivity survives the worry about epistemic luck raised in Chapter 2 and the explanatory challenge developed in Chapter 4. Making progress, however, requires a better idea of how we form true, justified beliefs about and acquire knowledge of robustly objective moral facts. Since it offers the most popular and best-developed epistemology of robustly objective morality, my inquiry in Chapter 5 focuses on contemporary moral intuitionism: the view that moral intuitions can be the source of basic moral knowledge. I argue that its success is mixed. While moral intuitionism has the conceptual tools to tackle the problem of epistemic luck from Chapter 2, it cannot insulate knowledge of robustly objective moral facts against the sceptical worry raised by the evolutionary debunking argument developed in Chapter 4. Thus, evolutionary theory, together with a commitment to robust moral objectivity, does lead to a form of unacceptable moral scepticism.
- Published
- 2018
9. Freud’s Vulnerability to the Social Ideals of His Time and Moral Skepticism
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Giovanini, Valerie Oved and Giovanini, Valerie Oved
- Published
- 2021
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10. Evolutionary Debunking and Normative Arguments Against Theism.
- Author
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Coley, Scott M.
- Abstract
The levers of natural selection are random genetic mutation, fitness for survival, and reproductive success. Defenders of the evolutionary debunking account (EDA) hold that such mechanisms aren't likely to produce cognitive faculties that reliably form true moral beliefs. So, according to EDA, given that our cognitive faculties are a product of unguided natural selection, we should be in doubt about the reliability of our moral cognition. Let the term 'sanspsychism' describe the view that no supramundane consciousness exists. In arguing against theism, some sanspsychists advance a normative claim about the moral significance of phenomena like sentient suffering. But if no supramundane consciousness exists, our cognitive faculties are a product of unguided natural selection. It follows that if EDA is correct, the sanspsychist should not think that our moral cognition is reliable. So unless the sanspsychist has a defeater for EDA, she should not think herself justified in appealing to normative reasons for denying the existence of God. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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11. How to Do Things with Justice: Professor Rawls, 1962–1971.
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Baranowski, Brad
- Subjects
MORAL reasoning ,JUSTICE ,TEACHER role ,ETHICS ,COLLEGE teachers ,DELIBERATION - Abstract
Understanding the social bases of what John Rawls meant by justice requires understanding a central part of Rawls's professional life: his role as a teacher. As this essay shows, Rawls's approach to teaching was not ancillary to his approach to heady philosophical issues like the justification of moral reasoning. Rather, there's an ethic that runs through Rawls's work, one focused on deliberation and consensus-seeking, and one whose strengths and weaknesses are easiest to see when you examine his teaching. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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12. Why Metaphysics and Morality?
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Kulp, Christopher B. and Kulp, Christopher B.
- Published
- 2019
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13. Ethical Mooreanism.
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Fuqua, Jonathan
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SECTS ,ARGUMENT - Abstract
In this paper I lay out, argue for, and defend ethical Mooreanism. In essence, the view says that some moral propositions are Moorean propositions and thus are epistemically superior to the conjunctions of the premises of skeptical arguments to the contrary. In Sect. 1 I explain Mooreanism and then ethical Mooreanism. In Sect. 2 I argue for ethical Mooreanism by noting a number of important epistemic parities that hold between certain moral truths and standard Moorean facts. In Sect. 3 I defend ethical Mooreanism against the objection that moral propositions are too epistemically dissimilar to standard Moorean facts to count as Moorean truths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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14. Nietzschean Moral Error Theory.
- Author
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Hassan, Patrick
- Abstract
Nietzsche has sometimes been interpreted as endorsing an error theory about moral judgements. A host of passages provide prima facie reason for such an interpretation. However, the extent of the appropriateness of this interpretation is a matter of dispute. The parameters of his alleged error theory are unclear. This paper reconsiders the evidence for the view that Nietzsche is a moral error theorist and makes the case that Nietzsche defends a local theory about a particular form of "morality," but that a global error theory about value judgments in general is not established by the textual evidence. This view is defended by considering Nietzsche's affinities with Hume and how they are better harnessed in service of a projectivist error-theoretic reading as opposed to alternatives in the secondary literature (such as noncognitivist readings). Moreover, it explores how Nietzsche can continue to make genuine (that is, nonfictionalist) evaluative judgments by his drawing of a distinction between conventional evaluative practice expressive of herd morality on the one hand and a revisionary evaluative practice available to a small number of "higher types" or "free spirits" on the other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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15. In Search of the Trinity: A Dilemma for Parfit's Conciliatory Project.
- Author
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Baumann, Marius
- Subjects
- *
MORAL realism , *UNDERDETERMINATION (Theory of knowledge) , *ETHICS - Abstract
I outline a dilemma for Derek Parfit's project to vindicate moral realism. In On What Matters, Parfit argues that the best versions of three of the main moral traditions agree on a set of moral principles, which should make us more confident about the prospects of truth in ethics. I show that the result of this Convergence Argument can be interpreted in two ways. Either there remain three separate and deontically equivalent theories or there remains just one theory, the Triple Theory. Both interpretations fail to deliver what Parfit is looking for. The first interpretation leads to a situation of underdetermination of theory choice that gives rise to a skeptical challenge. The second interpretation jettisons Parfit's Conciliatory Project, that is, the reconciliation of the three moral traditions. The dilemma, I contend, is the result of Parfit failing to resolve two antithetical lines of thought. His search for the Trinity of moral theorizing must thus fail. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Reassessing the Clash Between Isaiah Berlin's Value Pluralism and Ronald Dworkin's Monism.
- Author
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Matos Tormin, Mateus
- Abstract
Copyright of Analytica: Revista de Filosofia is the property of Analytica. Revista de Filosofia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Moral Realism and the Argument from Skepticism.
- Author
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Risberg, Olle and Tersman, Folke
- Subjects
MORAL realism ,SKEPTICISM ,ARGUMENT ,THEORY of knowledge ,ETHICS - Abstract
A long-standing family of worries about moral realism focuses on its implications for moral epistemology. The underlying concern is that if moral truths have the nature that realists believe, it is hard to see how we could know what they are. This objection may be called the "argument from skepticism" against moral realism. Realists have primarily responded to this argument by presenting accounts of how we could acquire knowledge of moral truths that are consistent with realist assumptions about their nature. Less time has been spent, however, on the question of why it would be a problem for moral realism if it leads to skepticism in the first place, and on the related question of which skeptical conclusions it would be problematic for realists to simply accept. This paper considers several answers to these questions, thereby distinguishing a number of versions of the argument from skepticism, and discusses their prospects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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18. Moral Fictionalism : How and why?
- Author
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Moberger, Victor, Olson, Jonas, Moberger, Victor, and Olson, Jonas
- Abstract
The central challenges for moral fictionalism are twofold: first, to explain how its recommendation that we abandon moral belief and assertion can be reconciled with its rationale of preserving the motivational efficacy of moral thought and discourse; second, to explain what the point is of replacing moral belief and assertion to begin with. This chapter clarifies these challenges and argues that Richard Joyce’s recent “metaphorist” version of fictionalism fares no better with respect to them than his earlier “narrationist” version. Just like its narrationist predecessor, metaphorist fictionalism fails to secure the motivational efficacy of moral thought and talk. The authors also find faults with yet more recent attempts at answering the above challenges for moral fictionalism, leaving the conservationist recommendation a more attractive alternative. This conclusion could be overturned if the conservationist proposal were sufficiently problematic in other respects, but the authors argue that it isn’t.
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- 2023
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19. History, Progress, Morality : An Inquiry on the Metaethics of Moral Progress
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Gustavsson, Jacob and Gustavsson, Jacob
- Abstract
In this essay, I examine the interplay between history, progress, and morality, as it is discussed explicitly or implicitly in the metaethical literature. At first sight, it is perhaps intuitive that these three are necessarily intertwined and mutually dependent, as if they were casually connected. For instance, few would deny that moral progress has occurred throughout history. The abolishment of slavery and the political emancipation of certain groups are seen as obvious signs that morality does indeed progress. Those who believe in de facto moral progress would point to such 'facts' by comparing two states of affairs according to their moral status. Moral progress thus occurs when we move from a "worse" state of affairs to a "better". However, this simple algorithm becomes increasingly untenable once we ask what it means for something to be "better". Better by what measure, better according to whom, better in what sense? Some – moral realists– will argue that as we become increasingly aware of moral truths and as these truths steadily accumulate, progress occurs. Others will argue that there are no moral truths and no moral facts, and a comparison between different states of affairs is impossible because it involves a sort of moral 'historical imperialism' in which we assert our convictions and prejudices upon a time and culture with completely different beliefs. Taken to the extreme, this view gives rise to the idea that moral progress is nothing but a mirage, a psychological necessity without justification. I conclude the essay by arguing that several positions fall short when addressing questions regarding moral progress, and that there are other ways of discussing it which might be more fruitful.
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- 2023
20. The Problem of Evil, Skeptical Theism and Moral Epistemology
- Author
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Scott M. Coley
- Subjects
problem of evil ,moral skepticism ,moral epistemology ,skeptical theism ,modal skepticism ,axiological skepticism ,Religions. Mythology. Rationalism ,BL1-2790 - Abstract
This paper argues that skeptical theism isn’t susceptible to criticisms of the view presented in James Sterba’s new book on the logical problem of evil. Nevertheless, Sterba’s argument does serve to underscore the unpalatable moral-epistemological consequences of skeptical theistic skepticism (STS): for precisely the reasons that STS doesn’t succumb to Sterba’s critique, STS threatens to undermine moral knowledge altogether.
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- 2021
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21. Foot Without Achilles' Heel.
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Hlobil, Ulf and Nieswandt, Katharina
- Subjects
ACHILLES (Mythological character) ,ARISTOTELIANISM (Philosophy) ,RESPONSIBILITY ,HUMAN behavior ,REASON ,SKEPTICISM - Abstract
It is often assumed that neo-Aristotelian virtue ethics postulates an obligation to be a good human being and that it derives further obligations from this idea. The paper argues that this assumption is false, at least for Philippa Foot's view. Our argument blocks a widespread objection to Foot's view, and it shows how virtue ethics in general can neutralize such worries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Philosophical Grounding For the Moral Law: In Defense of Kant's Factum der Vernunft (Fact of Reason).
- Author
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MONTE, DANIEL PAUL DAL
- Subjects
IRRATIONALISM (Philosophy) ,ENLIGHTENMENT ,SKEPTICISM ,ETHICS - Abstract
Copyright of Con-textos Kantianos: International Journal of Philosophy is the property of Con-Textos Kantianos (CTK) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Hinge Epistemology, Radical Skepticism, and Domain Specific Skepticism.
- Author
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Johnson, Drew
- Subjects
SKEPTICISM ,ANIMAL products ,THEORY of knowledge - Abstract
This paper explores how hinge epistemology (specifically, Duncan Pritchard's brand of hinge epistemology) might fruitfully be applied not only to the problem of radical skepticism, but also to certain domain specific (or 'local') skepticisms, and in particular, moral skepticism. The paper explains the idea of a domain specific skepticism, and how domain specific skepticisms contrast with radical skepticism. I argue that a domain specific skeptical problem can be resolved in just the same way as radical skepticism, if there are hinge commitments within that domain. I then suggest that there are hinge commitments in the moral domain, and use this to address a moral skeptical problem due to our apparent inability to know moral nihilism to be false. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Yet the Angel Must Hang: Billy Budd and Melville's Moral Skepticism.
- Author
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Packer, Mark
- Subjects
SKEPTICISM ,CATEGORIES (Philosophy) ,HUMAN behavior ,LAW & ethics ,COHERENCE (Philosophy) - Abstract
Abstract Yet the Angel Must Hang reflects on the mood of moral skepticism that pervades Billy Budd. This article examines several predicaments left unresolved by the end of the novel, including the narrator's ruminations on inherent conflicts within human nature, and his lamentations about the loss of spiritual wisdom among learned men of his generation. The story's defining collision between law and moral principle is analyzed with references to dilemmas confronting American judges during the antebellum period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Desvergüenza cosmopolita y ética de la migración: propuesta de fronteras morales abiertas
- Author
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Damián Bravo Zamora
- Subjects
moral skepticism ,Ética de la migración ,escepticismo moral ,open borders ,General Medicine ,relativismo moral ,moral relativism ,Ethics of migration ,fronteras abiertas - Abstract
Resumen. En este artículo clarifico la naturaleza de los compromisos morales más fundamentales de las discusiones contemporáneas en ética de la migración, algunos de los cuales son explícitamente adoptados tanto por los defensores como por los críticos de la propuesta de fronteras abiertas. Argumento que dichos principios fundamentales no son, a su vez, susceptibles de fundamentación racional, pero que esta situación está lejos de implicar la plausibilidad del relativismo moral. El reconocimiento de la peculiar naturaleza de los valores y principios éticos fundamentales (que aquí llamo ‘fundamentales-sin-fundamentos’) no implica la plausibilidad del relativismo moral, sino, por el contrario, implica reconocer que tanto el escepticismo moral como el relativismo moral son posiciones absurdas. Este resultado tiene consecuencias para la ética de la migración, pues bloquea intentos de justificar posturas anti-inmigrantes que apelan al relativismo moral. Abstract. In this paper, I clarify the nature of the most fundamental moral commitments that lie at the basis of contemporary discussions on the ethics of migration, some of which are explicitly adopted by both supporters and critics of the open borders proposal. I argue that it is impossible to provide a rational justification for these principles themselves, but that this situation does not imply that moral relativism is a plausible position. Understanding the unique nature of our commitment to fundamental ethical values and principles (which I here call ‘fundamental-and-groundless’ principles) does not imply that moral relativism is a plausible position, but quite the opposite, namely that we should become aware that both moral relativism and moral skepticism are absurd positions. This result has consequences on the ethics of migration, inasmuch as it blocks any attempt at justifying anti-immigrant positions which appeal to moral relativism.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Post-apocalyptic Tris
- Author
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Juengst, Eric, Rasmussen, Lisa M., Series editor, Iltis, Ana, editor, and Cherry, Mark J., editor
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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27. Book Three: Sections 108–125
- Author
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Langer, Monika M. and Langer, Monika M.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The tale of a moderate normative skeptic.
- Author
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Cline, Brendan
- Subjects
- *
SKEPTICS (Greek philosophy) , *METAETHICS , *SKEPTICISM , *MORAL judgment - Abstract
While Richard Joyce's moral skepticism might seem to be an extreme metaethical view, it is actually far more moderate than it might first appear. By articulating four challenges facing his approach to moral skepticism, I argue that Joyce's moderation is, in fact, a theoretical liability. First, the fact that Joyce is not skeptical about normativity in general makes it possible to develop close approximations to morality, lending support to moderate moral revisionism over moral error theory. Second, Joyce relies on strong, contentious conceptual and empirical claims in support of his views. Third, Joyce's evolutionary debunking argument threatens to backfire, generalizing to all normative judgments. Finally, Joyce fails to offer an adequate account of the normativity of desire. Each of these four challenges can be either sidestepped (the first and second) or embraced (the third and fourth) by radicalizing and defending a global form of normative skepticism. There are thus several ways in which global normative skepticism appears to be in a more robust dialectical position than Joyce's moral skepticism. Furthermore, I argue, Joyce's arguments against global normative skepticism are unconvincing. While this discussion is framed in terms of Joyce's work, its arguments will apply to other moral skeptics who are not also global normative skeptics. The result is an invitation for Joyce and other moral skeptics to leave these problems behind and join the radical camp. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Moral Realism, Meta-Ethical Pyrrhonism and Naturalism
- Author
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Khlentzos, Drew, Sellars, Wlifrid S., editor, Lehrer, Keith, editor, Cohen, Stewart, editor, Baker, Lynne Rudder, editor, Bogdan, Radu, editor, David, Marian, editor, Fischer, John M., editor, Gibbard, Allan, editor, Meyerson, Denise, editor, Recanati, François, editor, Sainsbury, Mark, editor, Silvers, Stuart, editor, Smith, Barry, editor, Smith, Nicholas D., editor, Zagzebski, Linda, editor, and Chan, David K., editor
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A REPLY TO RONALD DWORKIN’S CRITIQUE OF MORAL SKEPTICISM
- Author
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Mateus Matos Tormin
- Subjects
Structure (mathematical logic) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Philosophy ,Section (typography) ,Moral skepticism ,Indeterminacy (literature) ,Order (virtue) ,Objectivity (philosophy) ,Epistemology ,media_common ,Skepticism - Abstract
This paper focuses on “indeterminacy”, “objectivity” and “truth” in the work of Ronald Dworkin. The text is divided into four parts: first, I will expose the general structure of Dworkin’s conception of objectivity in the moral domain (Section 1). Next, I will present the main critiques Dworkin addresses to two of his most important philosophical enemies, namely the “external skeptic” (Section 2.1) and the “internal skeptic” (Section 2.2). I then intend to address Dworkin’s critiques by presenting counterarguments in defense of moral skepticism (Section 3). In order to clarify the debate and its points, I try to illustrate the arguments with examples whenever possible. In the concluding Section (4), I recapitulate the main points of the text.
- Published
- 2021
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31. Practical Intelligibility and Moral Skepticism: Should Realists Worry About Grass‐Counters and Hand‐Claspers?
- Author
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Micah Lott
- Subjects
Philosophy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Medicine ,Intelligibility (communication) ,Worry ,Moral skepticism ,Social psychology ,media_common - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Revelation, Moral Skepticism, and the Mu'tazilites
- Author
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Amir Saemi
- Subjects
Philosophy ,Moral skepticism ,Revelation ,Epistemology - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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33. Skeptical theism, moral skepticism, and epistemic propriety.
- Author
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Rutledge, Jonathan
- Subjects
- *
THEISM , *SKEPTICISM , *THEODICY , *GOOD & evil - Abstract
Respondents to the argument from evil who follow Michael Bergmann's development of skeptical theism hold that our failure to determine God's reasons for permitting evil does not disconfirm theism (i.e. render theism less probable on the evidence of evil than it would be if merely evaluated against our background knowledge) at all. They claim that such a thesis follows from the very plausible claim that (ST) we have no good reason to think our access to the realm of value is representative of the full realm of value. There are two interpretations of ST's strength, the stronger of which leads skeptical theists into moral skepticism and the weaker of which fails to rebut the argument from evil. As I demonstrate, skeptical theists avoid the charge of moral skepticism while also successfully rebutting the argument from evil only by embracing an equivocation between these two interpretations of ST. Thus, as I argue, skeptical theists are caught in a troubling dilemma: they must choose between moral skepticism and failure to adequately respond to the argument from evil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Debunking Arguments from Insensitivity.
- Author
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Braddock, Matthew
- Subjects
THEORY of knowledge ,SKEPTICISM - Abstract
Heightened awareness of the origins of our moral judgments pushes many in the direction of moral skepticism, in the direction of thinking we are unjustified in holding our moral judgments on a realist understanding of the moral truths. A classic debunking argument fleshes out this worry: the best explanation of our moral judgments does not appeal to their truth, so we are unjustified in holding our moral judgments. But it is unclear how to get from the explanatory premise to the debunking conclusion. This paper shows how to get from here to there by way of epistemic insensitivity. First, we reconstruct Richard Joyce's evolutionary debunking argument from insensitivity. Second, we raise epistemological difficulties for Joyce's argument. Third, we develop and defend a new debunking argument from insensitivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. “Why?” Gets No Answer: Paul Katsafanas’s Agency and the Foundations of Ethics.
- Author
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DANNENBERG, JORAH
- Subjects
- *
ETHICS , *NIHILISM (Philosophy) , *SKEPTICISM - Abstract
In this review, I consider Paul Katsafanas’s attempt to provide a constitutivist defense of ethics, informed by his rich and original reconstruction of Nietzsche’s theory of agency. In particular, I focus on the ambition to combat nihilism (conceived as a special brand of ethical skepticism), by offering a vindication of the authority of ethical values. I offer some reasons to question the viability of this strategy in general, as well as some considerations concerning the dispute between Nietzsche and Schopenhauer, which lead me to wonder about attributing such a strategy to Nietzsche in particular. Rather than reading Nietzsche as sharing the constitutivist’s defining ambition, I suggest that contemporary ethical theory may have more to learn from Nietzsche’s diagnosis of what the constitutivist is trying to do. Nietzsche’s understanding of nihilism suggests that seeking irrefutable foundations for our values may itself be a symptom of, rather than the cure for, the kind of ethical skepticism that plagues us. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Evolutionary debunking: Can moral realists explain the reliability of our moral judgments?
- Author
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Braddock, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
MORAL realism , *MORAL judgment , *EVOLUTIONARY ethics , *ETHICS - Abstract
Evolutionary debunking arguments, notably Sharon Street’s Darwinian Dilemma (2006), allege that moral realists need to explain the reliability of our moral judgments, given their evolutionary sources. David Copp (2008) and David Enoch (2010) take up the challenge. I argue on empirical grounds that realists have not met the challenge and moreover cannot do so. The outcome is that there are empirically-motivated reasons for thinking moral realists cannot explain moral reliability, given our current empirical understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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37. Dworkin on external skepticism and moral permissions.
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Martí, José Luis and Seleme, Hugo Omar
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SKEPTICISM ,MORAL judgment ,MORAL autonomy ,RIGHTS - Abstract
This article discusses Ronald Dworkin’s first objection against what he callsexternal moral skepticism, the view that denies truth-value to moral judgments. According to that objection, an external skeptic denies that substantive moral judgments can be true. But, at the same time, the objection goes, what follows from the skeptical view is that all actions are morally permissible, which is in itself a substantive moral judgment. We call this ‘the self-defeating argument.’ We argue that the objection’s success depends on how we interpret the idea of moral permission, an issue Dworkin does not clearly resolve. Against his objection, we advance two different arguments. First, once we learn what role the idea of moral permission plays in morality, we can see that any plausible view of some agent’s moral permission must acknowledge its complex character, and that the existence of a moral permission must have some impact on the balance of moral reasons for other agents. On this understanding, it is false that it follows solely from external skepticism that everything is permissible. Second, we argue that even if permissions have a simple character, not a complex one, they are plausible only when framed within a moral constellation of rights and obligations. So understood, it is, again, false that it follows from external skepticism that everything is permissible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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38. A liberal realist answer to debunking skeptics: the empirical case for realism.
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Huemer, Michael
- Subjects
- *
MORAL realism , *SKEPTICISM , *LIBERALISM , *PHILOSOPHY of science , *PERSONALITY & emotions , *ETHICS ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Debunking skeptics claim that our moral beliefs are formed by processes unsuited to identifying objective facts, such as emotions inculcated by our genes and culture; therefore, they say, even if there are objective moral facts, we probably don't know them. I argue that the debunking skeptics cannot explain the pervasive trend toward liberalization of values over human history, and that the best explanation is the realist's: humanity is becoming increasingly liberal because liberalism is the objectively correct moral stance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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39. Toward an ethics of professional understanding.
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Tanchuk, Nicolas, Scramstad, Carly, and Kruse, Marc
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PROFESSIONAL ethics ,NORMATIVITY (Ethics) ,SKEPTICISM ,ETHICS ,MORAL realism - Abstract
In this paper, we advance a novel conception of normative ethics and draw out its implications within the domain of professional ethics. We argue that all moral agents, and thus professionals, share a fundamental and constitutive normative interest in correctly conceiving of their ends. All professionals, we claim, by virtue of their positions of social power, have special role responsibilities in cultivating and sustaining societies oriented by this shared ideal of practically oriented ethical understanding. We defend this conception against a familiar opponent of a philosophical approach to professional ethics: the morally skeptical student (or university administrator). By taking the skeptic’s challenge seriously, we clarify the conditions for a sound account of normative ethics and then provide a response that meets this test. Against this type of skeptic, we claim that a fundamental commitment to the ideal of understanding our ends ought to be included within any curriculum of professional ethics that reflects moral reality. We argue that endorsing such a curriculum would make a significant difference in our sense of professional advocacy and in conceiving of who, what, and how we teach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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40. Respuesta a Wilson Herrera
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Díaz, Jorge Aurelio and Díaz, Jorge Aurelio
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Con el título “Spinoza: ideas, pasiones y acciones”, Wilson Herrera ha elaborado un extenso y cuidadoso análisis de la teoría de la acción humana según Baruch Spinoza, el cual aparece como colaboración al libro “Discusiones filosóficas con Jorge Aurelio Díaz” que publicó la Facultad de Ciencias Humanas de la Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Como en esa ocasión no comenté su escrito para no alargar demasiado mi colaboración, quiero cumplir ahora la promesa que hice de res- ponder a sus inquietudes sobre mi manera de entender la filosofía del pensador judío.
- Published
- 2021
41. Un prototipo del melancólico romántico en la novela española del siglo XX
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Raquel Gutiérrez Sebastián
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Linguistics and Language ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Feudalism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Comparative literature ,Character (symbol) ,Destiny ,Art ,Romance ,Philology ,Trilogy ,Moral skepticism ,Humanities ,media_common - Abstract
This research addresses the origins of a prototype repeatedly present in literature from the eighteenth century to the present, that of the melancholic character. His romantic affiliation is traced in the work of Goethe, Senancourt, Constant, Jacopo Ortis and Leopardi and it is analyzed in detail how this character is embodied in a character in the trilogy Los gozos y las sombras (1957–1962) of the Spanish writer of the century XX Gonzalo Torrente Ballester. We refer to the psychologist Carlos Deza, a psychiatrist trained in Germany who returns to his native Galician village of Pueblanueva del Conde, where his family, especially his aunt Mariana, has prepared for him a destiny of patriarch and feudal lord that is incapable of comply because of his apathy. The character concentrates all the elements of the romantic prototype of the melancholic: incessant mental activity, analysis of the thoughts and actions of the other characters, self-contemplation of their pain, dedication to intellectual activity, indecision and inability to action and moral skepticism.
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- 2019
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42. Local Evolutionary Debunking Arguments
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Rowland, R
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010506 paleontology ,Normative ethics ,Yield (finance) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,06 humanities and the arts ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,01 natural sciences ,Epistemology ,Philosophy ,060302 philosophy ,Sociology ,Moral skepticism ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Skepticism ,media_common - Abstract
Evolutionary debunking arguments in ethics aim to use facts about the evolutionary causes of ethical beliefs to undermine their justification. Global Evolutionary Debunking Arguments (GDAs) are arguments made in metaethics that aim to undermine the justification of all ethical beliefs. Local Evolutionary Debunking Arguments (LDAs) are arguments made in first‐order normative ethics that aim to undermine the justification of only some of our ethical beliefs. Guy Kahane, Regina Rini, Folke Tersman, and Katia Vavova argue for skepticism about the possibility of LDAs. They argue that LDAs cannot be successful because they over‐extend in a way that makes them self‐undermining and yield a form of moral skepticism. In this paper I argue that this skepticism about the possibility of LDAs is misplaced.
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- 2019
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43. Richard Joyce, Essays in Moral Skepticism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016), pp. ix + 274
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Jessica Isserow
- Subjects
Philosophy ,Sociology and Political Science ,Moral skepticism ,Religious studies - Published
- 2019
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44. Doyle, James. No Morality, No Self: Anscombe’s Radical Skepticism. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018. Pp. 256. $41.00 (cloth)
- Author
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Katharina Nieswandt
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Practical reason ,Philosophy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Moral skepticism ,Theology ,Morality ,Radical skepticism ,media_common - Published
- 2019
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45. Reasoning with the Exclusionary Other: Classical Scenes for a Postradical Horizon
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Carlos Palacios
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Cultural Studies ,Political radicalism ,Horizon (archaeology) ,General Arts and Humanities ,Modernity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Philosophy ,Humanism ,Moral skepticism ,Adam smith ,media_common ,Epistemology - Published
- 2019
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46. Moral Skepticism: New Essays, edited by Diego E. Machuca
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Neil Sinclair
- Subjects
Philosophy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Environmental ethics ,Moral skepticism ,Skepticism ,media_common - Published
- 2019
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47. Foot Without Achilles’ Heel
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Ulf Hlobil and Katharina Nieswandt
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Philosophy of mind ,Foot (prosody) ,Heel ,Virtue ethics ,Philosophy ,05 social sciences ,Rationality ,06 humanities and the arts ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,050105 experimental psychology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Argument ,060302 philosophy ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Obligation ,Moral skepticism ,Law and economics - Abstract
It is often assumed that neo-Aristotelian virtue ethics postulates an obligation to be a good human being and that it derives further obligations from this idea. The paper argues that this assumption is false, at least for Philippa Foot’s view. Our argument blocks a widespread objection to Foot’s view, and it shows how virtue ethics in general can neutralize such worries.
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- 2019
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48. Yet the Angel Must Hang: Billy Budd and Melville's Moral Skepticism
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Mark Packer
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Psychoanalysis ,Sociology and Political Science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Moral skepticism - Abstract
Yet the Angel Must Hang reflects on the mood of moral skepticism that pervades Billy Budd. This article examines several predicaments left unresolved by the end of the novel, including the narrator's ruminations on inherent conflicts within human nature, and his lamentations about the loss of spiritual wisdom among learned men of his generation. The story's defining collision between law and moral principle is analyzed with references to dilemmas confronting American judges during the antebellum period.
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- 2019
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49. Guiding Concepts : Essays on Normative Concepts, Knowledge, and Deliberation
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Risberg, Olle and Risberg, Olle
- Abstract
This thesis addresses a range of questions about normativity, broadly understood. Recurring themes include (i) the idea of normative ‘action-guidance’, and the connection between normativity and motivational states, (ii) the possibility of normative knowledge and its role in deliberation, and (iii) the question of whether (and if so, how) normative concepts can themselves be evaluated. The first two papers, ‘The Entanglement Problem and Idealization in Moral Philosophy’ and ‘Weighting Surprise Parties: Some Problems for Schroeder’, critically examine various versions of the view that what we ought to do depends on some (actual or hypothetical) motivational states, such as desires. It is suggested that such views are, for different but interrelated reasons, extensionally inadequate. The third paper, ‘From Evolutionary Theory to Moral Skepticism, via Disagreement’ (co- authored with Folke Tersman), proposes that two arguments for moral skepticism can be combined in a mutually supportive way. A central role is played by the principle that a subject S knows that p only if S adherently believes that p, where this roughly means that S could not easily have failed to believe that p unless her epistemic position were worse or p were false. It is suggested that evolutionary considerations and facts about moral disagreement together indicate that moral beliefs violate this principle. The fourth paper, ‘Ethics and the Question of What to Do’, offers an account of the so- called ‘central deliberative question’ that is highlighted by several kinds of choice situations, including those that involve normative uncertainty and normative conflicts. It is proposed that this question is not best understood as the question of what one ought to do, not even in an ‘all things considered’ sense, but as the question of what to do. A meta-normative view that involves elements of both cognitivism and non-cognitivism is put forward as the best explanation of this fact. The fifth paper, ‘Meta-S
- Published
- 2020
50. Freud’s Vulnerability to the Social Ideals of His Time and Moral Skepticism
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Valerie Oved Giovanini
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Ego ideal ,Psychoanalysis ,Natural morality ,Vulnerability ,Subject (philosophy) ,Moral responsibility ,Impossibility ,Moral skepticism ,Psychology ,Existentialism - Abstract
This chapter explores how cultural bonds and experiences unknowingly affect personal judgment and so lead to Freud’s moral skepticism. I recount Freud’s inability to reflect on risks to his life—despite theorizing about the opacity of knowledge—to show how more generally one is always unknowably affected by social and personal expectations. Freud’s vulnerability coupled with his astute observation about the opacity of knowledge demonstrates the human subject’s existential vulnerability to suffer from, and enjoy the use, of persecuting violence to attain moral ideals. Finally, I present and respond to Freud’s hyperbolic conclusion on the impossibility of living an ethical life. I expose his moral skepticism as representative of a tradition that values an individualized self and that culminates in the erosion of moral responsibility for the other.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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