C
Curious_Hobbit
Guest
In an excerpt I read from one of Edward Feser’s books he basically argued that since humans have a will and an intellect, we can understand what is “good” for us and will it to be. Being = good, and therefore fullness of being is rightly called good. A “good” triangle is a 3 sided polygon without any curved sides or open corners. Humans have certain ends attached to us by nature (hunger, freedom, procreation, survival, etc.) and the proper natural attainment of these ends are “good” in the same sense that a perfect, ideal triangle is good. Since we as humans have an intellect to decipher the natural teleological purposes of human action according to right reason and we have a will to choose whether or not to do “good”, we can know what is moral by reflecting on the metaphysical nature of humans.
David Oderberg argues that proponents of the fact/value distinction sacrifice a more complete conception of reality by denying the ethical realist to draw an Ought from an is. If “facts” are defined as only that which is empirically verifiable and quantifiable, then they are assuming that there are no facts beyond that which we can observe and experience. Oderberg proposes to define “facts” as -true propositions-.
For instance there are many true or false propositions that aren’t necessarily observable aspects of reality like,
Since there are facts that are either true or false, but aren’t observable in the sense that the statement “the sky is blue” is, the fact/value distinction assumes a definition of “facts” that can’t count for all of reality and excludes the position of the ethical realist as well. Here’s the Oderberg excerpt I drew from if anyone’s interested,
payingattentiontothesky.com/2011/02/04/the-fact-value-distinction-by-david-oderberg/
David Oderberg argues that proponents of the fact/value distinction sacrifice a more complete conception of reality by denying the ethical realist to draw an Ought from an is. If “facts” are defined as only that which is empirically verifiable and quantifiable, then they are assuming that there are no facts beyond that which we can observe and experience. Oderberg proposes to define “facts” as -true propositions-.
For instance there are many true or false propositions that aren’t necessarily observable aspects of reality like,
If Alan had bet on horse number five, he would have won’; ‘One day the universe will come to an end’; Mountain climbing is a dangerous sport’; Brian is a peculiar sort of chap’; The joke Alan told me is very funny’, etc.Since there are facts that are either true or false, but aren’t observable in the sense that the statement “the sky is blue” is, the fact/value distinction assumes a definition of “facts” that can’t count for all of reality and excludes the position of the ethical realist as well. Here’s the Oderberg excerpt I drew from if anyone’s interested,
payingattentiontothesky.com/2011/02/04/the-fact-value-distinction-by-david-oderberg/