Astrophel         
         
SophistiCat         
         The topic of this entry is not—at least directly—moral theory; rather, it is the definition of morality. Moral theories are large and complex things; definitions are not. The question of the definition of morality is the question of identifying the target of moral theorizing. Identifying this target enables us to see different moral theories as attempting to capture the very same thing. And it enables psychologists, anthropologists, evolutionary biologists, and other more empirically-oriented theorists to design their experiments or formulate their hypotheses without prejudicing matters too much in terms of the specific content a code, judgment, or norm must have in order to count as distinctively moral. — The Definition of Morality
Astrophel         
         Good question, but it probably shouldn't come as a surprise that it's been given some attention already. — SophistiCat
hypericin         
         
SophistiCat         
         It is not the definition of moral theory I am after. Note how this "definition" puts the burden of analysis on the "target", then proceeds to defer to psychologists, anthropologists and the rest. — Astrophel
SophistiCat         
         What it is is a codification (and in some cases, perversion) of innate concepts and feelings of fairness and justice that are inborn in most of us, and in most social species. — hypericin
hypericin         
         And this specific position is?This answer seeks to smuggle a specific position on metaethics into the very definition of the subject matter — SophistiCat
Astrophel         
         sn't ethics about deciding rationally what you ought to do? — Banno
180 Proof         
         I think that's backwards. The latter is decided on the basis of the former: "what do we do?" is the question of morality which is variously answered by (naive, banal or reflective) ethics.The problem of ethics is not "what is the case" but "What do we do"? — Banno
Astrophel         
         What it is is a codification, elaboration, ossification, (and in some cases, perversion),of innate concepts and feelings of fairness and justice that are inborn in most of us, and in most social species.
Consider, after all, the first moral utterance of every child: "It's not fair!" This is an untaught appeal to fairness and justice. — hypericin
Astrophel         
         No, you got the wrong idea. Read on. — SophistiCat
Astrophel         
         This answer seeks to smuggle a specific position on metaethics into the very definition of the subject matter. This is all too common in discussions such as this. — SophistiCat
Astrophel         
         This answer seeks to smuggle a specific position on metaethics into the very definition of the subject matter. This is all too common in discussions such as this. — SophistiCat
Astrophel         
         Ethics in general, is the nature of man.
A theory on the nature of man gives a ethical doctrine related to it.
Same as it ever was..... — Mww
Astrophel         
         Meh. Ethical actions tend to betray rationality more often then not, I'd think. — john27
Sorry, I couldn't make sense of this. — john27
john27         
         I think Apostrophel talks about logic and truth; how logical speech does not ALWAYS concern itself with ethics, so restricting ethics as a subset of reason is a bit of a useless exercise, is what I think he is saying. If he says that, I agree. — god must be atheist
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