Sets the ground. If murder isn't wrong, then on what basis is Jacek (Jack?) held. On what grounds is he in any jeopardy? And crime and penalty are different "departments" of justice. Usually - in the US - the trial establishes guilt, then the judge imposes a penalty. Usually the judge's business is to look for mitigating, exculpatory, or even more incriminating information. There was a period of mandatory sentencing - I think it's passed - but clearly in use it was itself unjust in many cases.To ascribe abstract laws to Ethics ignores the particulars of any given situation. — thewonder
Not sure what you mean by "methodology," but I'm thinking that law fits that bill. And any law I've ever read has a definitions section.A methodology that proceeds from that "murder is wrong" could be quite interesting. — thewonder
Had you just finished reading Les Misérables, you might suggest that it is fine to steal if you need to do so in order to survive. — thewonder
That murder is wrong is trivially assumed by everyone, I think - almost everyone. At issue here is whether the non-cognitivist view is nonsense. I think it is. — tim wood
does it make any practical difference in the real world if the reasons for a person thinking that murder is wrong are based in a strong sense of personal morality - i.e. if they are non-cognitivists? I think not. — EricH
So, for everyone else, does Non-Cognitivism deny that Ethical value judgements can be made? — thewonder
Not as your personal feeling, but in whatever passes in you for a larger sense. — tim wood
Would you say they could proceed from (or not include) premises that are not moral stances? — Terrapin Station
Please no replies; I've nothing more to add — tim wood
Unless they're on a jury - or in almost any other position in which the quality of their moral compass and moral thinking matters. — tim wood
I would not serve on a jury if there was any chance that the death penalty could be applied. — EricH
Yes. Anything else implies murder is not wrong. Any takers on that? — tim wood
I believe you would assert that the statement "Murder is wrong" is a true statement.
— EricH
Yes. Anything else implies murder is not wrong. Any takers on that? That is, that can make the case? — tim wood
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