A copy of this work was available on the public web and has been preserved in the Wayback Machine. The capture dates from 2020; you can also visit the original URL.
The file type is application/pdf
.
Why Moral Norms Cannot be Reduced to Facts: On a Trilemma in Derivations of Moral "Ought" from "Is"
2019
Archiwum Filozofii Prawa i Filozofii Społecznej
The paper aims at formulating a certain trilemma that applies to justifying moral norms. The trilemma can be succinctly stated as follows: any attempt to derive a "moral-ought-statement" from an "is-statement" with a justificatory goal (i.e. to justify the "moral-ought-statement"), even if it were successful in its "derivation" part (i.e. logically correct), would be unsuccessful in its "justificatory" part for one of the following three reasons: (1) it would consider each human action of which
doi:10.36280/afpifs.2019.2.63
fatcat:desnboclprhjtdcpbks7ayoeay