Emotivism and Cultural Relativism: Key Ethical and Cultural Concepts

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51 Terms

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Emotivism

This meta-ethical theory claims that moral judgments are neither true nor false but are merely expressions of the speaker's emotions, particularly feelings of approval or disapproval.

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Ethical Subjectivism

The philosophical position that holds moral judgments are dependent on the feelings, attitudes, or standards of a person or group, and that there are no objective moral facts.

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Logical Positivism

The view in logical positivism that claims legitimate truth claims must be empirically verifiable through sense experience.

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Charles L. Stevenson

The American philosopher (1909-1979) who developed one of the most influential theories of ethics in the 20th century, focusing on emotional expressions in moral language.

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Value Judgement

The type of ethical judgment that, according to the text, requires backing by reasons and becomes merely capricious without sensible rationale.

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The Problem of Disagreement

The philosophical problem that arises in Ethical Subjectivism when two people sincerely hold opposing moral views about the same issue.

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Love

The Christian philosophical emphasis mentioned in the text that suggests that this virtue is fundamentally about strong liking, desire, or emotion.

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Instinctive responses

This is the type of response that some ethicists believe feelings represent when faced with moral dilemmas - described as both instinctive and trained.

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Ethics-without-feeling

The meta-ethical approach that completely removes feelings from moral decision-making, which the text argues goes against both morality and Christian philosophy.

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Ethical Subjectivism vs Emotivism

The primary difference between Ethical Subjectivism and Emotivism is that Subjectivism treats moral statements as reports of attitudes while Emotivism treats them as expressions of attitudes.

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Disagreement Scenario

If Ethical Subjectivism were correct, the scenario that would be impossible is two people disagreeing about whether an action is moral.

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Emotivism interpretation of 'Stealing is immoral'

c) 'Boo on stealing!' or 'Don't steal!'

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Problematic aspect of logical positivism for Emotivism

b) It is self-refuting since it cannot itself be verified by sense experience

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Problem with Ethical Subjectivism

d) It requires too much rational deliberation before making moral decisions

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Ethics-without-feeling and Christian philosophy

b) Love, which is central to Christianity, involves strong emotions and desires

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Role of feelings in ethics according to the text

c) Feelings should be anchored to careful consideration of right goals and provide motivation for ethical action

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Jack the Ripper example and Ethical Subjectivism

b) It would require us to say we're merely expressing feelings rather than stating facts about evil actions

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Functions of moral sentences according to Emotivism

c) Influencing behavior and expressing (not reporting) attitudes

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Emotivism leading to anarchy

b) It provides no basis for distinguishing moral judgments from personal preferences

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Problematic scenario for Ethical Subjectivist

c) Someone saying 'I used to think X was wrong, but now I realize I was mistaken'

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Difference between moral judgments and personal preferences

b) Moral judgments require backing by pertinent reasons while preferences do not

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Relationship between reason and emotion in ethics

c) Both play important roles, with emotions providing motivation and reason providing guidance

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'Moral sense is nothing but herd instinct'

a) All moral feelings are learned rather than innate

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Feelings in moral decision-making

Feelings are important but should be anchored to careful consideration of right goals and provide motivation for ethical action.

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Culture as an embodiment of symbolic communication

A range of symbols, skills, knowledge, attitudes, values, and motives with deliberate meanings.

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Enculturation

How children socially learn the culture, including morality, of those around them.

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Social convention theory

Moral laws are defined as nothing but social conventions agreed upon by people.

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C.S. Lewis's argument about morality and mathematics

Both require logical reasoning to understand and abstraction so that morality can be quantified as numbers.

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Cultural relativism

No act is good or bad objectively; there is no single objective universal standard.

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Cultural differences argument

Different cultures have different moral codes, therefore there is no objective truth in morality.

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Rachels' counter-argument about Greeks and Galatians

Apparent moral differences may actually reflect different beliefs about facts, not values.

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Eskimo practice of infanticide

Life is harsh and the margin of safety is small that makes survival difficult.

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Cultural Understanding

We should try to understand other cultures and be humble in accepting one another's cultural flaws.

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Moral Inferiority

The customs of other societies are morally inferior to our own.

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Social Functions of Cultural Practices

Cultural practices serve different social functions that cater for the survival of each culture.

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Major Problem with Cultural Relativism

Is inconsistent in promoting tolerance while teaching that no culture is superior.

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Western Ethics Focus

Primarily focuses on finding truth through rational thought.

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Filipino Concept of 'Hiya'

Best described as fear of losing face or being embarrassed in the sight of others.

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Pakikisama

'Pakikisama' in Filipino culture involves having and maintaining good public relations to avoid conflicts.

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Universal Values

Suggests that certain values are generally shared by cultures despite geographical distance.

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Rachels' Argument on Eskimos

Cultural practices may serve the same underlying values despite appearing different.

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Culture Determination

Culture is learned through social processes, not determined by biological factors.

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Social Conditioning Theory

Suggests that moral consciousness is nothing but an outcome of social conditioning.

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Cultural Relativism and Moral Standards

Maintains that moral standards differ between cultures.

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Logical Inconsistency in Cultural Relativism

The statement 'there are no absolutes' is itself an absolute claim.

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Disagreement and Objective Moral Truth

Disagreement doesn't prove the absence of objective truth.

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Eastern Ethics Emphasis

Places greater emphasis on protocol, respect, and family obligations compared to Western ethics.

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Filipino Value of 'Utang na Loob'

Refers to the concept of reciprocity and returning favors.

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Cultural Relativism and Analytical Thinking

Discourages analytical thinking and promotes conformity to social norms.

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Moral Progress and Cultural Relativism

If cultural relativism is correct, moral progress is impossible because there is no standard by which to judge improvement.

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Universal Values and Cultural Relativism

Provide weak evidence against cultural relativism by showing that some moral principles are shared across cultures.