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Towards a new epistemology of moral progress

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-01, 00:00 authored by Patrick StokesPatrick Stokes
Abstract: Awareness that moral beliefs and practices have changed across time threatens our confidence in our current moral beliefs: if past moral beliefs turned out to be wrong, how can we be sure ours aren't likewise mistaken? In this paper, I set up four desiderata for a successful theory of moral progress: it must allow us to judge that progress has occurred, avoid the image of increasing correspondence towards ahistorical truthmakers, allow for revision in belief, and yet not be disobligating. Rorty's pragmatist account of moral progress delivers on the first three, but at the cost of failing to meet the fourth: it drains moral beliefs of their categorical force. I then outline K.E. Løgstrup's understanding of the relation between the ‘ethical demand’ and changing, socially mediated norms. While Løgstrup does posit an unchanging ground of normativity - the “ethical demand” to act for the sake of the other whose welfare is in our hands – he also thinks that changing social norms are an indispensable part of ethical life. I argue that Løgstrup's discussion of the ‘refraction‘ of the ethical demand through changing social norms provides resources for an account of moral progress that fulfils these four desiderata.

History

Journal

European journal of philosophy

Volume

25

Issue

4

Pagination

1824 - 1843

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

0966-8373

eISSN

1468-0378

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, John Wiley & Sons Ltd

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