Chapter 2: Subjective, Relativism, and Emotivism
mary midgley claims that refusing to make any moral judgments about other cultures is the only way to grow and achieve moral progress
false
moral objectivism and moral absolutism are the same thing
false
the distinction between disagreements over facts and disagreements over morality is important because
it is only when all of the facts are agreed upon that it can be determined if there is an actual disagreement over morality
according to emotivism, moral claims like murder is wrong are
none, nor true or false
if cultural relative is true, then moral progress
only happens with social reformers can defy the culture
If cultural relativism is true, then
social reformers are morally wrong, cultures cannot be mistaken about morality, disagreements over morality are really just disagreements over what the culture approves of
Subjective Relativism
the view that action is morally right if one approves of it
cultural relativism
the view that an action is morally right if one's culture approves of it
Emotivism
the view that moral utterances are neither true nor false but are expressions of emotions or attitudes
according to the cultural differences argument, that people disagree over morality means that moral principles must be relative to culture
true
ethical subjectivism is not weakened by the claim that it means people are morally infallible
true
if ethical subjectivism is true, then people cannot truly disagree over morality
true
Moral objectivism is the claim that:
Moral principles apply to everyone across cultures
Objectivism
The theory that moral truths exist and that they do so independently of what individuals or societies think of them; there universal moral principles, valid for all people and social environments