PHIL1002 Columbus State WK3 Ethical Relativism and The Ought Fallacy Paper

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Module 2A: Ethical Relativism and the Is/Ought Fallacy

The is/ought fallacy occurs when one draws a conclusion about what ought to be from statements about what is. For example, it would be a fallacy to argue that since everyone lies, everyone ought to lie. Just because something is the case, it does not mean that it ought to be the case. It would be a mistake to argue that since people do seek their own good, they ought to. It would be a mistake to argue that since people do naturally seek pleasure that they ought to seek pleasure.


Statements about what is the case are called Descriptive Statements because their aim is to say what is the case, that is, to describe what is

Some Descriptive Statements

Everyone lies

All human motivation is self-interested

Everyone seeks pleasure

Red is a color

Red is not a color

The number of stars in the universe is odd

The number of stars in the universe is even

No one lies

Different cultures have different moral standards


Notice that some of the descriptive statements above are false. A statement is descriptive if its intent is to describe what is that case, but it may fail to describe the situation correctly. So, “The number of stars in the universe is odd” and “the number of stars in the universe is even” are both descriptive even though at any given moment only one is true.


Statements about what ought to be the case are called Prescriptive Statements because they don’t merely describe what is the case, but they prescribe what ought to be the case. Prescriptive Statements are often called Normative Statements since they prescribe a norm or standard.

Some Prescriptive/Normative Statements

People ought to lie

People ought to be motivated only by self-interest

People ought to be motivation only by pleasure

People ought not lie


It would be nice if we could distinguish between descriptive claims from prescriptive claims by looking for the words “is” and “ought” but it is not so easy. For example,


Murder is wrong


is prescriptive, even though it does have the word “is” and does not have the word “ought”. Here’s why:


To say that murder is wrong is to say that one ought not to murder. It’s implicit, to be sure, but make a note: When we say that X is right or X is wrong, we are making a prescriptive claim, a normative claim (prescriptive and normative are synonymous).


The First Moral Theory of the Semester: Ethical Relativism

Two Correct Definitions

Ethical Relativism (definition 1): The view that what makes an act right or wrong is one’s culture: one’s culture is the only moral standard there is.


Ethical Relativism (definition 2): The view that one ought only to follow the rules of one’s culture, that there is nothing more to morality than that.


A Fallacious Argument in Favor of Ethical Relativism

Different cultures have different moral standards

Therefore, one ought only to follow the rules of one’s culture, that there is nothing more to morality than that.

Why is this argument invalid, fallacious?



Even though the most common argument in favor of Ethical Relativism is a fallacy, we need a good argument against it if we are justified in concluding it is false (It is one thing to say that an argument in favor of X is no good and it is quite another thing to say that there is good reason to think that X is false. If someone proposes an argument in favor of God’s existence that turns out to be faulty, we cannot, for that reason alone conclude that God does not exist).


Two Arguments Against Ethical Relativism

If ER is true, then moral change in a culture is neither moral progress nor moral decline.

Changes in a culture can be moral progress or decline.

Therefore, ER is false


If ER is true, then moral reformers are always wrong to oppose the culture’s moral standard.

A moral reformer may sometimes be right to oppose the culture’s moral standard.

Therefore ER is false


Both arguments are valid. Both have all true premises.


Conclusions

So the logic section was grueling but if you can see that Modus Tollens is a valid argument form and you believe that a culture can advance or decline morally, you also see that Ethical Relativism must be false. In the same way, if you see that Modus Tollens is a valid argument form and you believe that a moral reformer can sometimes be right to oppose a culture’s standard, then ER must be false.

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