Russ Shafer-Landau has sent out the Call for Abstracts for the Second Annual Metaethics Workshop, to be held at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, September 16-18, 2005. Abstracts of 2-3 double-spaced pages are due by May 1, 2005. All the relevant information can be found […] Read More
I recently received an e-mail from a former student proposing a good question: She had recently begun trying to read the contemporary literature in philosophical ethics (the sorts of things you’d find in journals like Ethics, Philoosphical Studies, Mind, Journal of Philosophy, etc.), and needless […] Read More
The call for abstracts for the Utilitarianism 2005 conference is here. The conference is August 11-14 at Dartmouth. All the cool kids will be there.
I promise to avoid bad puns in future titles. David Copp advances a “society-centered” theory (SCT) of the justification of moral standards in Morality, Normativity, and Society. It’s a standard-based theory. “Standard” is used in this context to name a rule or imperative, for example, […] Read More
Russ Shafer-Landau has uploaded some photos from the Metaethics Workshop last October in Madison. I hope Russ does not intend these photos to be part of an overall marketing strategy for next September’s Workshop, because the photos of these PEA Brains and this one will […] Read More
As some of you may already know, Paul Edwards passed away on December 9th. The New York Times Obituary can be found here (login required; thanks to Brian Leiter for the link). Edwards was known mostly for being the editor of The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. […] Read More
In Madison, Jamie, echoing Nicholas Unwin, posed a problem for expressivists generally, and for Gibbard specifically. As I understand it, the problem is that expressivists have no apparent semantic account of a certain kind of negation represented in (N2), which is to be distinguished from […] Read More
I’m slated to teach moral theory next quarter, and I’m confronting a problem that’s plagued me in the past: whether (and how) to teach the divine command theory (DCT) of ethics. I’ve taught it in past courses, and have never felt entirely satisfied with how […] Read More
It’s clear from recent posts and comments that we’ve all been thinking much too hard. So in the spirit of holiday good cheer, I hereby present my own effort at the Ultimate Hard Case in Ethics (UHCE). Suggestions for making it still harder are of […] Read More
