Meta Ethics Flashcards

(23 cards)

1
Q

Define meta ethics

A

Study of the foundations + meaning of ethical concepts or language

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2
Q

Define epistemology

A

Regards the nature, sources + justification of knowledge and belief.

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3
Q

What is cognitivism ?

A

Concept of meta ethics:

Moral concepts are absolutes that can be proven true or false

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4
Q

What is noncognitivism?

A

Concept of meta ethics:

Moral concepts convey subjective emotions/opinions not truth

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5
Q

Realism vs. Anti realism

A

Concepts of meta ethics:

Morals truths are absolutes and should be followed VS. relative to situation

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6
Q

The Is-Ought Problem

A

Hume - logical gap

You cannot derive an “ought” (sentiment of moral duty) from an “is” (a fact about the world).

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7
Q

Ethical Naturalism

A

Moral statements = can be verified empirically through discovery of human nature/world

  • i.e morally right if fulfils human purpose + promotes happiness (NML + Ut)
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8
Q

Ethical Non-Naturalism

A

Moral truths exist but are not observable or empirical.

  • shown in Moores naturalistic fallacy
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9
Q

What is the Naturalistic Fallacy?
(3)

A

Moore: principa ethica

  • Mistake to define moral concepts in terms of natural properties (e.g., happiness/survival).
  • “Good” is simple, indefinable, and cannot be reduced to anything else.
  • Like yellow cannot be described
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10
Q

Open question argument

A

Moore: Principa Ethica

Almost a test of his Naturalistic fallacy = shows that defining “good” in natural terms leaves a question:

E.g. One can ask “is happiness really good?” = they must be distinct concepts

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11
Q

What is Intuitionism 🧠

A

Moral truths are verifiable through intuition = self-evident, direct awareness of right and wrong.

  • cannot define moral truths but know through intuition
  • I.e dont need to experience murder to know its wrong
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12
Q

Scholar of intuitionism: Moore

A

Moral truths are known intuitively ≠ through senses

  • “Good” is a simple, indefinable property like the color yellow 🟡
  • Supported by Open q argument
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13
Q

Scholar of intuitionism: Ross

A

Prima facie duties = self-evident moral obligations

  • Fidelity, justice, gratitude
  • These duties are binding unless overridden by stronger duties
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14
Q

Evaluate intuitionism (4)

A

✅ Aligns with the concept of conscience
✅ Avoids reducing morality to science (naturalistic fallacy).

⛔️ People’s intuitions can conflict +are unfalsifiable
⛔️ Intuitions are shaped by culture and upbringing.

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15
Q

🌌

A
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16
Q

Emotivism

A

Non cognitive theory that moral statements express emotions not objective truths.

  • Moral debates are about influencing others, not discovering facts.
  • Ayer + Stevenson
17
Q

Ayer

A

Emotivism
Boo-Hurrah theory - moral statements are expressions of approval/disapproval.

18
Q

Stevenson

A

Emotivism
Expanded on Ayer’s ideas: moral language = persuasive function, to influence others’ emotions and actions.

19
Q

Weakness of emotivism

A

⛔️ No moral facts = can justify anything through emotion

20
Q

🌱

A

1963 IHAD speech
you’ve got this !!

21
Q

Prescriptivism

A

Non-cognitive theory that argues moral statements express commands that should be universalised.

22
Q

Hare 💇‍♂️ 🐇

A

Prescriptivism - moral statements are:

  • Rational = moral reasoning is structured and logical, not just emotional expression
  • Prescriptive = tell how ought to act.
  • 🌍 Universalisability principle = must be consistent in moral judgment
23
Q

Evaluate prescriptivism (3)

A

✅ Consistency of moral rulers is fair + reflects religious teachings

⛔️ Cultural differences in morality ≠ universalise
⛔️ People can universalise immoral principles = lying