Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Part I Realism about Value and Morality
- 1 Moral Realism (1986)
- 2 Facts and Values (1986)
- 3 Noncognitivism about Rationality: Benefits, Costs, and an Alternative (1993)
- 4 Aesthetic Value, Moral Value, and the Ambitions of Naturalism (1997)
- 5 Red, Bitter, Good (1998)
- Part II Normative Moral Theory
- Part III The Authority of Ethics and Value – The Problem of Normativity
- Index
4 - Aesthetic Value, Moral Value, and the Ambitions of Naturalism (1997)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Part I Realism about Value and Morality
- 1 Moral Realism (1986)
- 2 Facts and Values (1986)
- 3 Noncognitivism about Rationality: Benefits, Costs, and an Alternative (1993)
- 4 Aesthetic Value, Moral Value, and the Ambitions of Naturalism (1997)
- 5 Red, Bitter, Good (1998)
- Part II Normative Moral Theory
- Part III The Authority of Ethics and Value – The Problem of Normativity
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Here's a story that Hume, I believe, would have liked.
Someone I know once led a group of U.S. journalists on a tour of Germany. The tour was part of a public relations effort by a German company, so naturally the journalists were prone to be skeptical of what they saw and heard. One of the stops was a sort of clearinghouse where professional tasters made judgments about the quality, readiness, price, and so on of wines from various vineyards and regions. To display their skill to the journalists, the tasters performed blind tests – the journalists would pour wine from numbered bottles into unlabeled cups and then bring them to the tasters, who would attempt to identify the number of the wine. The tasters did so well that one of the journalists thought there must be a trick. He therefore surreptitiously contrived to pour wine from two different bottles into a single cup before submitting it to the tasters. He stood back to watch the reaction. The first taster washed the wine over his tongue, spat it out, and pronounced: “Hmmm … Something's the matter here … maybe you accidentally poured some wine into a cup that wasn't empty? I think I can taste some of number ten, but there's also a bit of something more like number seventeen or. …” After leaving the clearinghouse, the journalist later confessed the trick to his host. “You know,” he said, “those guys are really onto something.”
What they are onto, of course, is a set of complex perceptual qualities that make up the taste of wine.
- Type
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- Facts, Values, and NormsEssays toward a Morality of Consequence, pp. 85 - 130Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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