Part I: Ethics
Chapter 2
Study questions for What is Metaethics?
- Give examples of some serious moral disagreements. What explanations can you give for why people disagree about these things?
- What does moral relativism say about moral judgements? Are there any areas where our judgements are relative to the majority beliefs in our culture?
- Explain, in your own words, what subjectivism says, and why it might be plausible. Can the subjectivist really account for moral disagreement?
- Why can’t moral properties be natural properties, according to G. E. Moore?
- Explain, in your own words, why people think there is a link between morality and action. Why do objectivist accounts struggle to explain this link?
Multiple Choice Questions
Weblinks for What is metaethics?
http://ethics-etc.com/about/. [A forum for discussing issues in ethics, with a section on metaethics.]
http://peasoup.typepad.com/. [Another good online discussion site, with a lot of discussion of metaethics.]
Sayre-McCord, Geoffrey (2012). ‘Metaethics’. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/metaethics/. [An excellent overview of central issues in metaethics.]
Introductory further reading for What is metaethics?
Kirchin, Simon (2012). Metaethics. Palgrave Macmillan. [A clear, accessible and thorough introduction to central questions in metaethics.]
Miller, Alexander (2013). Contemporary Metaethics: An Introduction. 2nd edition. Polity Press. [Both an excellent and comprehensive introductory text and a rigorous and sophisticated discussion of contemporary debates.]
Advanced further reading for What is metaethics?
Harman, Gilbert and Jarvis Thomson, Judith (1996). Moral Relativism and Moral Objectivity. Wiley-Blackwell. [A stimulating debate between two of the world’s best moral philosophers,
Harman putting the case for relativism, Jarvis Thomson the case that morality is objective.]
Moore, G. E. (1903/1993). Principia Ethica. 2nd edition. Cambridge University Press. [Moore’s classic and influential book, which presents his attack on naturalistic accounts of morality.]
Schroeder, Mark (2010). Noncognitivism in Ethics. Routledge. [An excellent overview of expressivist theories.]
Smith, Michael (1994). The Moral Problem. Blackwell. [A splendid book covering many of the central issues in metaethics, and a particularly illuminating discussion of moral motivation.]