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Moral Truth
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 April 2010
Extract
Is worrying about whether moral judgments are true or false a philosophical waste of time? It can seem to be if moral truth claims are redundant on thejudgments they claim to be true. If to claim that the judgment “x is wrong” is true is simply to judge x wrong, anyone who is prepared to make judgments can consistently make truth claims. A concern for moral truth is then merely a concern for whether anything is right or wrong, not a separable concern for whether moral judgments are true or false.
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- Information
- Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review / Revue canadienne de philosophie , Volume 26 , Issue 3 , Autumn 1987 , pp. 437 - 452
- Copyright
- Copyright © Canadian Philosophical Association 1987
References
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7 This remark is not intended to imply that the statement “x is illegal” has no truth value or that the legal imperative “x is wrong” has no truth value in a corresponding sense. Nor is characterizing legal imperatives as conventional intended to endorse an account of law which Ronald Dworkin classifies as conventionalism in Law's Empire (Cambridge, MA: Harvard niversity Press, 1986). The characterization merely implies that the legal “x is wrong” has no truth value over and above that of “x is illegal”, which is someth?ng even a “non-conventionalist” in Dworkin's sense can accept. For distinctions and an account of the issues, see especially his chapters 1 and 4, including referencesGoogle Scholar.
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