Abstract

How should we understand the notion of moral objectivity? Metaethical positions that vindicate morality’s objective appearance are often associated with moral realism. On a realist construal, moral objectivity is understood in terms of mind-, stance-, or attitude-independence. But realism is not the only game in town for moral objectivists. On an antirealist construal, morality’s objective features are understood in virtue of our attitudes. In this paper I aim to develop this antirealist construal of moral objectivity in further detail, and to make its metaphysical commitments explicit. I do so by building on Sharon Street’s version of “Humean Constructivism”. Instead of the realist notion of attitude-independence, the antirealist account of moral objectivity that I articulate centres on the notion of standpoint-invariance. While constructivists have been criticized for compromising on the issue of moral objectivity, I make a preliminary case for the thesis that, armed with the notion of standpoint-invariance, constructivists have resources to vindicate an account of objectivity with just the right strength, given the commitments of ordinary moral thought and practice. In support of this thesis I highlight recent experimental findings about folk moral objectivism. Empirical observations about the nature of moral discourse have traditionally been taken to give prima facie support to moral realism. I argue, by contrast, that from what we can tell from our current experimental understanding, antirealists can capture the commitments of ordinary discourse at least as well as realists can.

Highlights

  • There is a broad consensus among philosophers that morality has certain objective features, and that it is a metaethical desideratum to account for this

  • My primary aim in this paper is to develop an antirealist view of moral objectivity in further detail, and to make its metaphysical commitments explicit

  • The constructivist concedes that this is a genuine theoretical possibility – and in the most extreme of such cases, she will maintain, it is most sensible to conclude that fully coherent agents who endorse very bizarre normative judgements, should not be regarded as moral agents. This last point brings us to thought-experiments that involve BIdeally Coherent Eccentrics^ (ICEs), which are often invoked to push the ‘relativity objection’ against antirealist objectivity

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Summary

Introduction

There is a broad consensus among philosophers that morality has certain objective features, and that it is a metaethical desideratum to account for this. Sharon Street (2006, 2016a) has forcefully argued that if moral truths or facts are fully attitude-independent, we have no guarantee that our moral judgements reliably track these truths or facts Other critics, such as John Mackie (1977), argue that a realist view is epistemically, and metaphysically problematic.. For the purposes of the present discussion, realists and antirealists stand united in defending an account of moral objectivity, but differ with respect to the metaphysical framework in terms of which they defend this account While this is not the only way of drawing the realism-antirealism distinction, it is a common one

The Metaethical Relevance of Ordinary Discourse
Refining the Explanandum
Humean Constructivism
Objectivity as Standpoint-Invariance
The Relativity Objection
The Alignment Objection
The Revision Objection
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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