REALISM IN MORAL THEORY
Meaning of moral realism We claim that to abuse a child, sexually or physically, is morally
wrong. Is this merely our opinion, a socially supported opinion, or a report on some objective
property, namely the fact that it is wrong to be abusive? Moral realism is
the doctrine that moral judgments, when correct, refer to something that is
objective,
independent of our opinions, that exists, in some sense, external to human thought. Moral
realists believe that moral facts support many of our moral judgments. Moral observations This form of moral realism links moral judgment to observations. But
we may wonder whether common needs or common cultural conditioning leads us to call the act
wrong, and not some sort of observable property? Opponents of moral realism claim that
moral "facts," the facts required by moral realists, would be strange elements in our ontology.
An ontology is a philosophical view that specifies the kinds of entities, broadly conceived, that exist in the universe. In philosophy, for example, some ontologists believe that only physical objects exists, while others hold that other kinds of things, mental and spiritual, exist. In moral theory, some philosophers argue that objective, independent moral properties are strange and unneeded additions to our ontology; moral theory makes perfect sense, they insist, without an appeal to special moral objects over and above nonmoral objects.
Even though they reject special moral objects, the opponents of moral realism need not
claim that moral judgments are subjective. They may claim that we respond with moral
condemnation to the abuse of the child because of our nature, our needs, our cultural
standards, or our natural sentiments. These all may have an objective base, but they are
not moral facts. Other forms of moral realismMoral realism is a general doctrine. It is consistent with Plato's view that morality involves universal, absolute, unchanging moral ideals that may be fully understood only by the wise. Others believe that moral standards are in the mind of God, and so are objective. This is another form of moral realism. However, many philosophers contend that even if God proposes moral standards, we may reject them. If God wanted us to do something evil, we would know that it was evil. Even if God wills only the good, the fact that we can judge what God wills suggests that moral standards are not simply in God's mind. Top Stephen Boyds test of moral realismThe American philosopher Stephen Boyd recently proposed some simple tests to confirm the truth of moral realism.
Moral realism and stable standards Moral realism depends on identifying some objective moral standards
that do not vary from place to place. So far this identification appears futile. If moral realism were true, and observed moral properties were as basic as many current moral realists claim, like observing the evil of
a child being abused, we would most likely have made more progress in basic moral theory
than we have over the last 2,000 years. On the other hand, if moral realism affirms some
recondite but real property, like Platonic ideals, then moral progress is less likely.
ABSOLUTISM
|