Emotivism - Pegasus Cc Ucf
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Transcript Emotivism - Pegasus Cc Ucf
Rachel Petrik
Based on writing by A.J. Ayer
A.J. Ayer
20th century English philosopher
Wrote Language, Truth, and Logic in
1936
Established himself as leading English
rep of Logical Positivism
Logical Positivism
Also called logical empiricism
Empiricism= concepts originate in
experience and propositions are justifiable
only through experience
View that scientific knowledge is the only
kind of factual knowledge
Metaphysical statements are not factual
Emotivism
Teaches that moral statements:
Are meaningless
Only express the speaker’s feelings about the
issue
Later emotivists added the idea that moral
statements are used to influence another person’s
thoughts and conduct by informing them of the
speaker’s feelings
Moral Statements
Does not literally spell out the speaker’s feelings
Expresses feelings, approval, or disapproval with
emotive force
Similar to connotation
The overtones of feeling that a word arouses
Separate from its literal meaning
Is the difference between conveying information
and appealing to feelings
Ayer’s Ideas and Principles
All meaningful statements are analytic (true by
definition) or synthetic (deriving meaning from
being empirically verifiable)
Called the Verification Principle
Ethical terms cannot be translated into
statements of empirical fact
The inability to translate into empirical fact
makes them unverifiable
Ethical statements are synthetic, not analytic
Therefore, moral facts do not exist
Cannot adopt a subjectivist or utilitarian analysis of
ethical terms
Utilitarian: rightness and goodness in terms of
pleasure or happiness that result
Subjectivist: approval of the action from a certain
person or group
Belongs to psychology or sociology, not philosophy
These two views cannot be absolute
To accept absolute view, recognize ethical concepts are
irreducible to empirical concepts
Therefore ethics do not derive from observation
Instead from intellectual intuition
No criterion to decide between conflicting intuitions
Ethical concepts are pseudo-concepts
Ethical or moral statement does not
add factual content to a proposition
Simply evincing moral approval or
disapproval
A proposition only containing ethical
symbols has no factual meaning
Evaluating Emotivism
The verification principle appears to be
synthetic, but not empirically verifiable
There are moral disagreements
Yet if there is no reason or fact behind
moral statements, why do we argue?
Seems possible to judge something to be
morally wrong without having any emotional
reaction to it
Summary
Emotivism is not a widely accepted theory
today
Most philosophers think moral statements
are more than just expressions of feeling