•  199
    The founding assertion that certain truths are "self-evident" reflects a deeper philosophical commitment to moral realism—the view that objective moral facts exist independently of human opinion. Yet contemporary American discourse reveals a paradox: while citizens engage in passionate moral debates as if objective truths were at stake, many simultaneously embrace relativistic frameworks that deny such truths exist. This contradiction suggests a fundamental crisis in moral epistemology that tran…Read more
  • This paper presents Dual-Level Moral Anthropology (DLMA), a novel theoretical framework that reconceptualizes moral responsibility through two distinct but integrated levels of moral processing. Drawing on teleological principles, moral psychology, and event-causal libertarianism, DLMA proposes that moral agency operates through: (1) Teleological Moral Psychology - automatic moral intuitions aimed at tracking moral truth, and (2) Conscious Moral Agency - libertarian responses to these teleologic…Read more
  •  654
    This essay defends the existence of objective moral standards as a necessary framework for coherent moral reasoning. Using real-life examples, logical arguments, and an epistemic lens, I argue that moral relativism is both self-refuting and impractical. By demonstrating that claims of “no objective standards” ultimately assert a kind of standard themselves, I expose the contradiction at the heart of relativist thought. Through historical case studies—such as racism and the Holocaust—I show that …Read more