Valarie Renaux
Theses on ethical eliminativism1
1. Premise: the universe is purely physical. All apparently non-physical properties are either
reducible to physical properties or are eliminable from the schema. There are no “nomological
danglers”.2
2. Scepticism about the status of moral properties resulting from first thesis. Diverse attribution
of moral properties by different speakers (natural phenomena, non-natural phenomena, divine
command, ergon for a telos, etc.).3 Moral properties as metaphysically and epistemologically
queer.4 Denial that moral properties are mind-independent; denial that moral properties
obtain. Moral properties eliminated from the schema: anti-realism.
3. Scepticism about the status of moral judgements resulting from second thesis. Moral
judgements as radically relative between speakers.5 Moral judgements as metaphysically and
epistemologically queer.6 Denial that moral judgements are truth-apt. Essential character of
moral judgements not of the form “X is Y,” but “X !!,” ‘where the shape and thickness of the
exclamation marks show, by a suitable convention, that a special sort of moral disapproval is
the feeling which is being expressed’.7 Moral judgements reduced within the schema:
noncognitivism.
4. Ethics as containing four questions:
a.
the emotional state of the speaker;
c.
the semantic status of moral language;
b. the underlying social relations, and more fundamentally, physical relations which
determine the ethicist's emotional states: biology, the superstructural forms of the
society arising from the mode of production, the mode of production;
d. the status of moral mental states.
A. as ontologically sound, analytically reducible; b. as fundamentally structural (non-ethical)
and so disregardable; c. as reporting emotional states; d. as non-belief states.
5. Three formulations of noncognitivism resulting from third and fourth theses:
Originally published with the subtitle “Toward a noncognitivist moral abolitionism”.
From Feigl, via Smart. See: J. J. C. Smart, “Sensations and Brain Processes,” T
he Philosophical Review 68 2, and
H. Feigl, “The ‘Mental’ and the ‘Physical’,” M
innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science 2. See: “Theses on
eliminativism,” first thesis.
3
J. L. Mackie, “The Subjectivity of Values,” The argument from relativity, E
thics: Inventing Right and Wrong
4
J. L. Mackie, “The Subjectivity of Values,” The argument from queerness, E
thics: Inventing Right and Wrong
5
J. L. Mackie, “The Subjectivity of Values,” The argument from relativity, E
thics: Inventing Right and Wrong
6
J. L. Mackie, “The Subjectivity of Values,” The argument from queerness, E
thics: Inventing Right and Wrong
7
A. J. Ayer, “Critique of Ethics and Morality,” L
anguage, Truth and Logic
1
2
a.
Moral judgments considered as mental states: denial that moral judgments are beliefs.
Eliminative materialism: there is no class of mental states amounting to the concept of
belief. Moral judgements as emotional responses to stimuli. Primary moral judgements
as ad hoc and arising from the individual organism; secondary moral judgements as
socially coherent and arising from the society (both basic and superstructural).
b. Moral judgments considered as sentence types: denial that moral judgments are
propositions. Sentences expressing moral judgements as not truth-apt. Sentences
expressing moral judgements as lacking underlying propositional grammar (third
thesis). Prescriptivism as inferior model for ethical commands to the externalisation
of emotivist responses of the form “I feel X in response to Y, and so should you” due to
detaching the ethical statement from its emotional basis; prescriptivism as either
immaterialist (a false discussion; see first thesis) or otherwise structuralist (a
non-ethical discussion; a political discussion).8
c.
Moral judgments considered as speech acts: denial that moral judgments are
assertions. Moral judgements as representing, first, the primary emotional state of the
speaker, the response to the given stimuli, and, subsidiarily, the secondary emotional
state of wishing the other would also hold the primary emotional state in response to
that species of stimuli or individual stimulus, distinct from structural determination of
individual and collective action (see part a).
6. Resulting from third through fifth theses: moral judgements as reducible without loss of
meaning to emotional responses (third and fifth thesis); moral statements as reducible
without loss of meaning to emotional reports.
7. Resulting from sixth thesis: question of fictionalism versus eliminativism about moral
language. Fictionalism as unnecessary and obfuscatory. Fictionalism as retaining metaphysical
concepts, even if as metaphor. Eliminativism as plausible; eliminativism as desirable.
8. Resulting from third through seventh theses: moral judgements eliminated from the schema.
8
See, also for 5c, C. L. Stevenson, “The Emotive Meaning of Ethical Terms,” M
ind 46 181
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ALARIE RENAUX 2020