To be sure, non-cognitivists maintain that moral utterances are not, technically, propositions, but so what? If all you are saying is that theirs is a tortured semantics, I would tend to agree with you, but at the same time, I don't find this issue to be interesting or important enough to argue. — SophistiCat
It is fine to not find it interesting. One can be more interested in revisionism than what the actual concepts are. Such projects can be both useful and interesting.
Still, I was responding to
@Truth Seeker's first question:
Is right and wrong just a matter of thinking something is right [...] and something is wrong[...]? — Truth Seeker
That question is about what "right" and "wrong"
are and to answer that it is important to understand what they
mean. Semantics is important in that regard. If one uses a different meaning, one is answering a different question. Dismissing semantics abandons that project.
You keep referring to "crude subjectivism" - what is that, and who propounds it? — SophistiCat
Roughly: x is right = I have a positive attitude towards x. And similar translations for other evaluative terms.
I use the term
crude subjectivism to separate my critiques from more complicated variants of relativism and subjectivism. I think that is useful for the sake of revealing issues with certain anti-realist positions that share the same relevant features as crude subjectivism without distractions. It is "crude" in that it is the rudimentary form of a family of views.
It is frequently advanced in ethics classes, on forums, and informal metaethical discussions. It becomes even more frequent if one include its sibling, crude cultural relativism, which suffers from the same kind of issues. I take it as quite obvious that many hold these kinds of views in our times. It is quite a natural reading to take as the implied view in
@Truth Seeker's first question. So I think it is worth critiquing.
Historical examples are always more sophisticated. Philosophers tend to go beyond the rudimentary. In either case, I think Edvard Westermarck gives an account for moral concepts that is close to crude subjectivism. There is a similar strand in a part of Thomas Hobbes. Some passages of David Hume also invite this reading, but I think he avoids fitting that mold on the whole. I'm not really sure where to put Hume metaethically, to be honest.
And why do you think that it does not adequately address the open question challenge? — SophistiCat
Because if the crude subjectivist theory is correct about our moral concepts, the meaning of the sentence
(O) "I think abortion is wrong, but is it wrong?" would translate to
(T) "I think I have a negative attitude towards abortion, but do I have a negative attitude towards abortion?" which makes that kind of reflection seem trivial, like "I think I'm hungry, but am I hungry?" Checking one's attitudes seems to be quite straight forward most of the time. But reading (O), it does not sound like such trivial reflection. So as a metaethical theory, we have evidence against crude subjectivism.
Any moral question worth asking is, by that very framing, not a trivial question to answer, even for a subjectivist (perhaps especially for a subjectivist). Introspection in such matters is not as easy as reading a number off a gauge. Nor does one need to be satisfied by the first subjective impression. — SophistiCat
That is a fine point well put. I think the plausibility depends on how one cashes out "attitude" but you are right that introspection is not
always clear on most such views. After watching a challenging film, I might genuinely question what attitude I have towards the film while I'm driving home from the cinema.
I still think it is difficult to capture the meaning of these questions for subjectivists. Even an incredibly self-aware person that attends to their attitudes could ask those kinds of questions in a way that sounds coherent and substantial.
Brainwashing is not a good counterexample. A brainwashed subject is a morally impaired subject. — SophistiCat
I don't really see why it is not a good counter-example. What do you mean by a "morally impaired" subject? That is not clear to me. Otherwise, it risks seeming like an
ad hoc fix.
In either case, here is a new version that illustrates where I think both crude subjectivism, even with your suggested fixes, don't seem to capture the meaning.
The Dying Omnivore. Adam is sitting on his porch, reflecting. Adam is a deeply self-aware person that is well-attuned to his attitudes. Tomorrow, Adam has chosen to die due to inoperable cancer. Still, he is clear-headed. In that moment on the porch, Adam asks himself,
"I believe and will always believe that buying animal products is right, but is it right?" and then continues,
"I'm certain I have a positive attitude towards buying animal products and that I will always have that positive attitude towards it, but is it right?"
If crude subjectivism, even with the added dimension of degrees of belief, is correct about the meaning of "right" and "wrong," it appears like the two questions by Adam should sound like trivial, settled re-asks akin to "It is snowing today, but is it snowing today?" One would probably suspect that the person was confused if they asked such a question. But Adam's questions sound coherent and substantive rather than obviously confused and trivial. So crude subjectivism probably gives the wrong account for the meaning of "right" and "wrong."
I am not sure what point you are making here, if it is not just the truth-aptness point - is it? Yes, if moral utterances are not propositions, then, trivially, they cannot be contradictory in the logical sense. But is this really important? They are opposite, contrasting, or what have you - for all intents and purposes, other than logical formalism, it comes to the same thing, doesn't it? — SophistiCat
I agree that it would be a trivial point if emotivism is assumed as the correct account of morality. Of course there would be no contradiction. However, I have not assumed emotivism, because the correctness of emotivism is part of what is in dispute when we are figuring out what "right" and "wrong" is.
My point here was that moral discourse behaves like propositions, while emotivism predicts they would not. Since emotivism goes against the linguistic data, it does probably not capture what "right" and "wrong" means.