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276Debunking and DisagreementNoûs 51 (4): 754-774. 2017.The fact that debunkers can turn to the argument from disagreement for help is ofcourse not a surprise. After all, both types of challenge basically pursue the same,skeptical conclusion. What I have tried to show, however, is that they are related in amore intimate way.
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198Disagreement: Ethics and ElsewhereErkenntnis 79 (1): 55-72. 2014.According to a traditional argument against moral realism, the existence of objective moral facts is hard to reconcile with the existence of radical disagreement over moral issues. An increasingly popular response to this argument is to insist that it generalizes too easily. Thus, it has been argued that if one rejects moral realism on the basis of disagreement then one is committed to similar views about epistemology and meta-ethics itself, since the disagreements that arise in those areas are …Read more
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2Recension av Michail Larsen och Ole Thyssen: "Den fria tanken - en grundbok i filosofi"Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 10 (1): 39. 1989.
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164Non-Cognitivism and InconsistencySouthern Journal of Philosophy 33 (3): 361-372. 1995.This is acknowledged by moral realists and non-cognitivists alike, but, for obvious reasons, they relate differently to this resemblance. For realists, it provides arguments, and for non-cognitivists, it provides potential trouble. Realists claim that the various points of resemblance between moral and factual discourse indicate that moral discourse simply is a kind of factual discourse.1 However, in recent years a number of interesting attempts have been made in trying to show that the realist …Read more
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50However, Davidson is not only skeptical towards the view that sensory stimulation provides the basis for meaning. He has also raised some doubts about the idea that such phenomena provide the basis for knowledge. For example, he rejects the idea that the acceptance of an observation sentence could somehow be justified by the stimulations that normally cause it. This in turn leads him to doubt the thesis that observation sentences have a privileged epistemological status; a thesis that is central…Read more
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149The Case for a Mixed Verdict on Ethics and EpistemologyPhilosophical Topics 38 (2): 181-204. 2010.An increasingly popular strategy among critics of ethical anti-realism is to stress that the traditional arguments for that position work just as well in the case of other areas. For example, on the basis of that claim, it has recently been claimed that ethical expressivists are committed to being expressivists also about epistemic judgments (including the judgment that it is rational to believe in ethical expressivism). This in turn is supposed to seriously undermine their position. The purpose…Read more
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171Quine on EthicsTheoria 64 (1): 84-98. 1998.W.V. Quine has expressed a fairly conventional form of non-cognitivism in those of his writings that concern the status of moral judgments. For instance, in Quine (1981), he argues that ethics, as compared with science, is ‘methodologically infirm’. The reason is that while science is responsive to observation, and therefore ‘retains some title to a correspondence theory of truth’ (p. 63), ethics lacks such responsiveness. This in turn leads Quine to contrast moral judgments with judgments that …Read more
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30Disagreement, MoralIn Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
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58DAVIDSON, DONALD: Problems of Rationality Oxford: Clarendon, 2004, pp. xx + 280. ISBN 0-19-823754-Theoria 72 (3): 233-239. 2006.
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124A World without Values: Essays on John Mackie’s Moral Error Theory, edited by Richard Joyce and Simon KirchinInternational Journal for the Study of Skepticism 5 (4): 333-337. 2015._ Source: _Page Count 5
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503The reliability of moral intuitions: A challenge from neuroscienceAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 86 (3). 2008.A recent study of moral intuitions, performed by Joshua Greene and a group of researchers at Princeton University, has recently received a lot of attention. Greene and his collaborators designed a set of experiments in which subjects were undergoing brain scanning as they were asked to respond to various practical dilemmas. They found that contemplation of some of these cases (cases where the subjects had to imagine that they must use some direct form of violence) elicited greater activity in ce…Read more