Meaning of 'Ought'

£25.19

Meaning of 'Ought'

Beyond Descriptivism and Expressivism in Metaethics

Philosophy of language Ethics and moral philosophy

Author: Matthew Chrisman

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Collection: Oxford Moral Theory

Language: English

Published by: Oxford University Press

Published on: 23rd October 2015

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 1 Mb

ISBN: 9780190463625


Overview

The word ought is one of the core normative terms, but it is also a modal word. In this book Matthew Chrisman develops a careful account of the semantics of ought as a modal operator, and uses this to motivate a novel inferentialist account of why ought-sentences have the meaning that they have. This is a metanormative account that agrees with traditional descriptivist theories in metaethics that specifying the truth-conditions of normative sentences is a central part of the explanation of their meaning.

But Chrisman argues that this leaves important metasemantic questions about what it is in virtue of which ought-sentences have the meanings that they have unanswered. His appeal to inferentialism aims to provide a viable anti-descriptivist but also anti-expressivist answer to these questions.

Critical Reception

This is a remarkably bold and interesting book. Chrisman challenges nothing less than the entire conceptual framework within which most previous metaethics (and indeed, much other contemporary philosophy) has been done, and advances a very ambitious rethinking of the theoretical space. It''s not only ambitious, but also extremely imaginative and smart, and Chrisman''s scholarship is at a rare level, as he has assimilated a literature that is unusually broad both in terms of field and historical scope. - Stephen Finlay, Professor of Philosophy, University of Southern California

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