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Saron Negash

University of Notre Dame
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  •  Publications
    3
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 More details
  • University of Notre Dame
    Undergraduate
Notre Dame, Indiana, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics and Epistemology
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics and Epistemology
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy, Misc
  • All publications (3)
  •  199
    Metaphysics and finding a middle ground between The Positivists and Plato. Why experience is so important.
    How ought we to go about metaphysics? An examination of the two poles, Quine and Plato. Why we should be sceptical of the empiricist tendencies but equally wary of the transcendental underpinnings of Platonism. Could a phenomenological approach lead to a compromise?
    Plato: Philosophical Method, MiscMetaphysics, General WorksMethodology in Metaphysics
  •  104
    A Metaethical Analysis of Ethics via Synthetic/Analytic Distinction: Do ethics have any ‘real’ significance?
    Using synthetic analytic distinction to examine the importance of ethical discourse. How do we go about determining whether ethics have any significance at all? This essay examines the operation of ethical language and argues that emotivism is the most comprehensive metaethical stance.
  •  104
    Metaethical analysis of ethics via synthetic/analytic distinction: Do ethics have any 'real' significance?
    Are moral claims true? This article uses a synthetic/analytic perspective to examine the metaethical issue of moral realism. And in doing so, I present a different, internally consistent metaethical theory. However, I also go beyond the metaethical and consider how it would actually work in practice. My paper will make the case that, rather than providing a factual explanation for moral claims, emotivism provides the most comprehensive account of the status of ethical language and its significan…Read more
    Are moral claims true? This article uses a synthetic/analytic perspective to examine the metaethical issue of moral realism. And in doing so, I present a different, internally consistent metaethical theory. However, I also go beyond the metaethical and consider how it would actually work in practice. My paper will make the case that, rather than providing a factual explanation for moral claims, emotivism provides the most comprehensive account of the status of ethical language and its significance in the emotive role.
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