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Subjectivism and Toleration
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2010
Extract
Bertrand Russell said more than once that he was uncomfortable about a conflict, as he saw it, between two things: the strength of the conviction with which he held his ethical beliefs, and the philosophical opinions that he had about the status of those ethical beliefs—opinions which were non-cognitivist, and in some sense subjectivist. Russell felt that, in some way, if he did not think that his ethical beliefs were objective, he had no right to hold them so passionately. This discomfort was not something that Ayer noted or discussed in his account of Russell's moral philosophy and ethical opinions, at least in the book that he wrote for the Modern Masters series (RS). Perhaps this was because it was not a kind of discomfort that Ayer felt himself. His own philosophical views about the status of ethics were at all periods at any rate non-cognitivist, and I think that he did not mind them being called ‘subjectivist’. He did indeed argue that the supposed difference between objectivism and subjectivism in ethics did no work, and that philosophers who took themselves to be objectivists could not achieve anything more than those who admitted they were subjectivists. Ayer based this mainly on the idea that the claims made by objectivists for the factuality, objective truth, and so forth of moral judgments added nothing to those judgments—so far as moral conclusions were concerned, the objectivist was saying the same as the subjectivist but in a louder voice.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 1991
References
1 ‘On the Analysis of Moral Judgements’, originally published in Horizon xx (1949)Google Scholar, reprinted in PE; this quotation is from pp. 237–238 in that reprint.
2 ‘Philosophy and Polities’, published 1967 by the Liverpool University Press, reprinted in MCS; the quotation is from pp. 259–260 of the reprint.
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