Moral Fictionalism and Moral Reasons

One major problem with moral discourse is that we tend treat moral utterances as if they represent propositions. But complex metaphysical problems arise when we try to describe the nature of the moral facts that correspond to these propositions. If moral facts do not exist, how can moralizers justif...

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Main Author: Clipsham, Patrick
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/3922
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spelling ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-39222013-01-08T18:51:33ZClipsham, Patrick2008-08-28T15:26:07Z2008-08-28T15:26:07Z2008-08-28T15:26:07Z2008http://hdl.handle.net/10012/3922One major problem with moral discourse is that we tend treat moral utterances as if they represent propositions. But complex metaphysical problems arise when we try to describe the nature of the moral facts that correspond to these propositions. If moral facts do not exist, how can moralizers justify engagement in moral practice? One possibility is abolitionism; abandoning morality and growing out of our old habits. Another option that has been suggested is that morality be preserved as a useful fiction. Moral fictionalists propose that moralizers come to understand their moral beliefs as fictive precommitments that are instrumentally valuable. In this essay, I argue that this type of instrumentalist justification does not allow moralizers to have genuinely moral reasons for acting in accordance with their precommitments. The legislative function of morality and the concept of moral personhood cannot be supported by metaethical theories that only provide instrumental reasons for adopting moral discourse. Ironically, this implies that an instrumentalist moral society would not be able to preserve as many useful moral concepts as would a non-instrumentalist moral society. Since the fictionalists’ own criterion demands that they endorse the most instrumentally valuable metaethical theory, they cannot persuasively argue that their own metaethical alternative is viable. Fictionalists should, I argue, prefer a non-instrumentalist theory that preserves more of the functions of moral discourse, such as quasi-realism. The argumentative strategy employed by fictionalists is therefore self-undermining.enfictionalismquasi-realismMoral Fictionalism and Moral ReasonsThesis or DissertationPhilosophyMaster of ArtsPhilosophy
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic fictionalism
quasi-realism
Philosophy
spellingShingle fictionalism
quasi-realism
Philosophy
Clipsham, Patrick
Moral Fictionalism and Moral Reasons
description One major problem with moral discourse is that we tend treat moral utterances as if they represent propositions. But complex metaphysical problems arise when we try to describe the nature of the moral facts that correspond to these propositions. If moral facts do not exist, how can moralizers justify engagement in moral practice? One possibility is abolitionism; abandoning morality and growing out of our old habits. Another option that has been suggested is that morality be preserved as a useful fiction. Moral fictionalists propose that moralizers come to understand their moral beliefs as fictive precommitments that are instrumentally valuable. In this essay, I argue that this type of instrumentalist justification does not allow moralizers to have genuinely moral reasons for acting in accordance with their precommitments. The legislative function of morality and the concept of moral personhood cannot be supported by metaethical theories that only provide instrumental reasons for adopting moral discourse. Ironically, this implies that an instrumentalist moral society would not be able to preserve as many useful moral concepts as would a non-instrumentalist moral society. Since the fictionalists’ own criterion demands that they endorse the most instrumentally valuable metaethical theory, they cannot persuasively argue that their own metaethical alternative is viable. Fictionalists should, I argue, prefer a non-instrumentalist theory that preserves more of the functions of moral discourse, such as quasi-realism. The argumentative strategy employed by fictionalists is therefore self-undermining.
author Clipsham, Patrick
author_facet Clipsham, Patrick
author_sort Clipsham, Patrick
title Moral Fictionalism and Moral Reasons
title_short Moral Fictionalism and Moral Reasons
title_full Moral Fictionalism and Moral Reasons
title_fullStr Moral Fictionalism and Moral Reasons
title_full_unstemmed Moral Fictionalism and Moral Reasons
title_sort moral fictionalism and moral reasons
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/3922
work_keys_str_mv AT clipshampatrick moralfictionalismandmoralreasons
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