
Impassioned Belief Presents An Original Expressivist Theory Of Normative Judgments. According To His Ecumenical Expressivism Normative Judgements Are Hybrid States Partly Constituted By Ordinary Beliefs And Partly Constituted By Desire-like States. Michael Ridge Builds On A Series Of Articles In Which He Has Developed This Theory, But Moves Beyond Them In The Following Key Respects. First, Ridge Now More Sharply Distinguishes Semantics From Meta-semantics, Situating Ecumenical Expressivism Firmly On The Meta-semantic Side Of This Divide, Thus Enabling Ecumenical Expressivism To Accommodate A Fully Truth-conditional Approach To First-order Semantics. Second, This Distinction Allows Ridge To Offer A Distinctive Contextualist Semantic Framework For Normative Discourse. Contra Orthodox Presuppositions, A Contextualist Semantics Does Not Entail Cognitivism-at Least Not If We Carefully Heed The Semantics/meta-semantics Distinction. Third, Because This Contextualist Framework Is Couched In Terms Of Standards, Ridge Now Rejects His Previous 'ideal Advisor' Approach And Instead Adopts A Theory Couched In Terms Of Acceptable Standards Of Practical Reasoning. This Has Interesting Consequences For Longstanding Debates Over The Context-sensitivity Of Reasons, The So-called 'buck-passing' Theory Of Value, And The Role Of Principles In Normative Thought ('particularism' Versus 'generalism'). Fourth, Drawing On The Work Of Scott Soames, Ridge Develops A Novel Theory Of Normative Propositions, According To Which They Are A Certain Kind Of Cognitive Event Type. Somewhat Surprisingly, This Conception Allows That There Can Be Irreducible Normative Propositions, Even Given Expressivism. Fifth, Ridge Offers A Novel Approach To Talk Of Truth Which Enables Expressivists To Accommodate Truth-aptness Without Committing Themselves To Deflationism About Truth. In Fact, The Theory Is Flexible Enough That It Can Elegantly Be Combined Even With A Robust Correspondence Conception Of Truth.
This work investigates the nature of normative judgments by proposing an original expressivist theory known as Ecumenical Expressivism. Michael Ridge, a philosopher specializing in metaethics, constructs a framework that defines normative judgments as hybrid states composed of both ordinary beliefs and desire-like states. By distinguishing semantics from meta-semantics, the author argues that expressivism can coexist with truth-conditional semantics and a contextualist approach to normative discourse.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this text as a significant contribution to contemporary metaethical discourse, particularly for its attempt to reconcile expressivism with truth-conditional semantics. Readers frequently note the high level of academic density and the requirement for a strong background in analytic philosophy to fully grasp the proposed distinctions.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
ISBN-10:
0191505129
ISBN-13:
9780191505126
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