From: Brian Manning Delaney (bdelaney@infinitefaculty.org)
Date: Fri Sep 10 1999 - 13:20:13 MDT
Dan Fabulich wrote:
> On Thu, 9 Sep 1999, Brian Manning Delaney wrote:
>> -What's ethical?
>> - [Your answer here.]
>> ---------------------------------------
>>
>> Actually, I imagine your answer would be very
>> long, and don't expect you to give it. But I've
>> found that most answers to that question come
>> back to utility. So there's still a circle, but
>> just a slightly more complicated one.
> Well, frankly, yes, my answer would be quite long. :)
>
> However, as regards ethics, it is certainly
> wrong, ethically speaking, to conclude that
> ethics is a circular/pointless endeavor.
No argument from me in the slightest on that one.
[....]
> Of course, this proof doesn't tell you which
> theory of ethics is actually correct, but it
> does at least show that the project is not
> hopeless.
Yes. I meant the question "What's ethical?" as a general
question, and thus not one simply about which action is ethical
from within a particular theory. (Your proof doesn't apply to
all theories.)
Again, my experience with philosophers from within the
pragmatist or utilitarian traditions is that their answers to
the question -- which answers would require justifying a
"system," not answering the question from within a system -- end
up being circular.
Not that philosophers from other traditions have clearly solved
the problem either, of course....
(ergo: let's keep thinking; NOT [simply]: party on, dude.)
Brian.
-- Brian Manning Delaney <b-delaney@uchicago.edu>
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