Meta-Ethics
What do we mean when we use
ethical language?
Meta-Ethics
• Meta-ethics is concerned with what we mean when we use words like ‘good’ ‘bad’ ‘right’ ‘wrong’.
• It is not a normative system of ethics – its does not tell us what we can and can’t do
•
• Theft in Buna (the factory) punished by civil law, is authorised and encouraged by the SS; theft in the camp, severely repressed by the SS is considered by the civilians as a normal exchange operation; theft among prisoners is generally punished, but the punishment strikes the theif and victim with equal gravity. We now invite the reader to contemplate the possible meaning in Aushwitz of the words ‘good’, ‘evil’, ‘just’ and ‘unjust’; let everyone judge ... How much of this ordinary moral world can survive on this side of the wire. – Primo Levi
• What philosophical questions does this raise?
• Realist – believe it actually exists independently of you, out there in the world- morality can be discovered
• Anti – realist – do not believe it exists in the world and word refers to something else – eg a property in our minds- morality is decided or invented
• What does this term mean? What does this word refer to?
Term Realists say it refer to
Anti – Realists might say this term refer to ...
Beauty Beautiful things are out there in the world
Our response to objects that we have been socially conditioned to call beautiful
Red The property of redness in the world
A mental image or idea of redness
/electron A quantum object which has a negative electrical charge
A term which has a place in a complex theoretical system that usefully explains certain phenomena witnessed in laboratories
Wrong The breaking of one of god’s commandments
An expression of our disapproval at certain types of action
• Cognitivist – theory which says that statements and judgements express our beliefs about the world in known as this
• - true or false• Matches with realism• - rationalist theories, naturalist,
intuitionist theories• Non-cognitivist – statements which do
not refer to the world at all – have no truth value –emotivism, prescriptivsm, ethical relativism, moral nihilism
BackgroundThe philosopher David Hume was an empiricist: he argued that things can only be ‘real’ or ‘meaningful’ if they can be verified or proved by our five senses.
e.g.: I know oranges exist because I have seen, smelt, touched and tasted them
Ethical NaturalismA branch of ethics called Ethical
Naturalism developed from empiricism and the ideas of David Hume.
These ethicists argued that we observe the world around us and create moral theories for fit our observations.
An Example…
If we could prove, empirically and provide proof, that women make better parents than men (i.e. if this was a fact)
Then we could argue than men should not be single parents. (moral judgement)
Is-Ought Gap
• Many opponents of the naturalist position argue that we cannot make the leap between a FACT (is) and a MORAL JUDGEMENT (ought).
Naturalistic Fallacy
• This jump from an is to an ought, from fact to moral judgement is what critics of Naturalism call the Naturalistic Fallacy.
Is this really ethics?• Is this form of naturalism what we
would call ‘ethics’ or is it sociology, or psychology?
IntuitionismThe philosopher G.E. Moore
criticised naturalism. Instead he said we have an infallible intuitive knowledge of good things.
e.g. I don’t need to observe a murder to know that killing someone is wrong – I just know it is.
Continued ….
• When I make a moral decision I am simply choosing the outcome that will bring about these good things.
Simple v ComplexMoore argued that there are simple
and complex ideas.
Complex = ‘horse’ can be broken down into animal, mammal, quadraped, equine.
Simple = ‘yellow’ we can’t break it down any further.
Moral terms are simple
‘Good’‘Bad’‘Right’‘Wrong’
Are simple terms ‘Good’ is simply ‘good’.
Moral judgements cannot be proven
Moore further argued that moral judgements cannot be proven empirically.
We cannot observe pleasure and then say that goodness is pleasure.
W.D. Ross - IntuitionismRoss accepted Moore’s version of
ethics and also added that in any given situation moral duties or obligations become apparent.
These are called prima facie duties.Prima facie means ‘at first
appearance’
Prima Facie Duties• Ross listed the following as prima
facie duties:Keeping a promise, reparation for
harm done, gratitude, justice, beneficence, self-improvement and non-maleficence
He acknowledged that this list might not be complete.
EmotivismA.J. Ayer was a Logical Positivist. He
believed that meaningful statements had to be verified either synthetically or analytically otherwise they are meaningless.
Analytic Statements
1 + 1 = 2All triangles have 3 sides
All spinsters are unmarried women
All of these statements are true in themselves – they are true by definition
Synthetic Statements
It’s snowingThere’s a squirrel in that tree
That chair is brown
These are all synthetic statements - they can be verified by our five senses.
So what are moral statements?
Moral statements cannot be verified synthetically or analytically. Therefore they are not truths or facts.
Moral statements are simply expressions of preference, attitude or feeling.
Emotivism – ‘boo’ ‘hurrah’
Moral statements come from our emotional responses to situations.
When I say murder is wrong I am saying ‘murder – boooooooo!’
When I say giving to charity is good I am saying ‘charity - hurrrrrah!’
C. L. Stevenson
Stevenson added to Ayer’s theory by asserting that when we make moral statements we are not only expressing our emotional response to a situation but we are also trying to persuade others to have the same emotional response.
The Removal of Reason
The removal of reason is one of the major criticisms of emotivism and intuitionism.
James Rachels argues that it is wrong of Ayer to make a connection between the ‘ouch’ response when you stub your toe and the ‘that’s wrong’ reaction when you see details of a murder on the news.
PrescriptivismMoral statements are objective. They
are both prescriptive and universal.
The only coherent way to behave morally is to act on judgements that you are prepared to universalise.
Prescriptivism• Moral statements are objective.
They are prescriptive and universal
The only way to act morally in any situation is to respond in a way that we would be prepared to say that EVERYONE should have to behave.
A summary of meta-ethics…
Meta-ethicsHow we use ethical
language and where itcomes from.
IntuitionismOur intuition tellsus what is right
or wrong
EmotivismWhat is right or wrong
is simply an emotional response
to a situation
PrescriptivismWhen I say something
is right I’m tryingto get you to think
the same
Our ethical journey so far …
ETHICSETHICS
NORMATIVE ETHICSNORMATIVE ETHICS
RELATIVE
META-ETHICSMETA-ETHICS
ABSOLUTE
Intuitionism Emotivism Prescriptivism
Virtue EthicsNatural Law
Thomas Aquinas Aristotle
G.E. MooreH.A. Pritchard
W.D. Ross
A.J. AyerC.L. Stevenson
R.M. Hare