Sunday, June 2, 2019
Proving A Moral Principle :: Philosophy Philosophical Morals Essays
Proving A Moral Principle Once one has examined an ethical theory and knows what its fundamental concepts are what kinds of factors are to be used in making good judgments, whether its principles apply directly to acts or rules, and what concepts of the good life is proposed one is certainly in a better maculation to judge which of all the competitive principles comes closest to fulfilling the task of giving a complete account of moral phenomena. Unfortunately this may non be lavish to enable us to choose among them. Most of the classical principles do a reasonably good job of supplying a rationale for most if not all of our moral judgments. Yet the principles are often incompatible with one another. Must we then decide among them not simply on the basis of their adequateness to explain and justify moral judgments but on the basis of simple preference, i.e. because we like one better than another? We are more likely to intrust a moral theory that says that most of our moral be liefs are correct, then one that says that most of our moral beliefs are inconsistent. Of course no theory testament make them all come out authorized. We have to balance the question of our philosophical grounds for believing that the moral theory is in fact true that it corresponds to the demands that actually exist for us in reality rather than merely being an accurate codification of what we happen to believe. It could still turn out that the true moral theory, the theory that comes closest to capturing the things one actually ought or ought not to do, coheres less well with our ordinary moral beliefs than another theory which is less revisionary in its consequences. The payoff Im addressing is the proof of a set of moral principles, the proof of the validity of a moral outlook or theory. Various attempts have been made to avoid this plain irrational consequence by supplying what often have been referred to as proofs of moral principles. The term proof as so used had a wid ely variable meaning but in general what is intended is a set of considerations, other than the internal consistency and adequacy of the theory, which are particularly smooth-tongued in making a choice of one theory or principle over another. There have been several different kinds of such proofs.
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