Abstract

Teleosemantics is the view that mental content depends on etiological function. Moral adaptationism is the view that human morality is an evolved adaptation. Jointly, these two views offer new venues for naturalist metaethics. Several authors have seen, in the conjunction of these views, the promise of assigning naturalistically respectable descriptive content to moral judgments. One such author is Neil Sinclair, who has offered a blueprint for how to conduct teleosemantic metaethics with the help of moral adaptationism. In this paper, I argue that the prospects for assigning descriptive content to moral judgments on the basis of teleosemantics are bad. I develop my argument in dialogue with Sinclair’s paper and argue that, although Sinclair’s account of the evolution of morality is plausible, the teleosemantic account of the descriptive content of moral judgments which he bases thereon suffers from crucial shortcomings. I argue further that, given some minimal plausible assumptions about the evolution of morality made by Sinclair, no assignment of descriptive content is possible. Contrary to prevailing assumptions, the combination of moral adaptationism and teleosemantics suggests that moral judgments lack descriptive content.

Highlights

  • Recent decades have seen the development of increasingly sophisticated theories purporting to explain moral thought and behavior on evolutionary grounds (e.g. Alexander 1987; Joyce 2007; Kitcher 2007; Boehm 2012; Tomasello 2015), lending growing support to the view that human morality is a biological adaptation

  • Moral adaptationism has often been taken to have anti-realist implications in metaethics (Ruse 1995; Street 2006), and most ethicists would probably deny that the view has any implications at all for first-order normative questions

  • The two legs of this program share a common presupposition: that the combination of teleosemantics and moral adaptationism underwrites descriptivism about moral judgments, defined here as the view that moral judgments have descriptive content; that they represent the world as being a certain way

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Summary

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Like Jacob Ross (2019), have argued that teleosemantics together with evolutionary theories of morality can be used to directly address first-order normative questions These two projects constitute the two legs of what I call “the teleosemantic program in ethics.”. I will develop my argument through a critical engagement with Sinclair’s paper, which I believe constitutes a blueprint for how the teleosemantic program in ethics should be pursued and suffers from crucial shortcomings Diagnosing these shortcomings will yield a number of constraints on adequate content assignments. 3 to argue that the bargaining thesis is inconsistent with any attempt to assign descriptive contents to moral judgments If this is right, and if I am correct that the bargaining thesis constitutes the minimal commitments any moral-adaptationist theory must take on board, this invalidates the teleosemantic program in ethics.

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