Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Origin of Oughtness

Publisher:

Regular price $160.99
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $160.99
Sold out
The aim of the series is to publish high-quality studies in English or German that deal with topics in practical philosophy from a broadly analytic perspective. These include questions in meta-ethi...
Read More
  • 06 August 2018
View Product Details

How come we ought to do things? Current metanormative debates often suffer from the fact that authors implicitly use adequacy conditions not shared by their opponents. This leads to an unsatisfying dialectical gridlock (Chang): One author accuses her opponents of not being able to account for stuff she judges essential, but the opponents do not think this to be a major flaw. In an attempt to meet the problem of gridlock head-on, the current investigation approaches oughtness differently.

I start with the introduction of a grounding framework for thinking about oughtness that allows a lucid presentation of the views on the market. It soon becomes clear that one necessary part of any plausible assessment of accounts of oughtness is a discussion of their adequacy conditions. I continue with a detailed evaluation of four different accounts, as presented by Halbig (2007), Schroeder (2007), Stemmer (2006), and Scanlon (2014). My main result is that desire-based or Humean theories of oughtness are more plausible because desire-independent accounts fail to explain something crucial: the for-me character of oughtness. Based on the insights gathered thus far, I then develop a new Humean theory – metaethical conativism – and defend it against some historically influential objections.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $160.99
Pages: 297
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: De Gruyter
Publication Date: 06 August 2018
ISBN: 9783110600728
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
Stefan Fischer, University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany.