Earning the Right Means Paying the Costs: Metaphysical Problems for Quasi-Realism

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Date
2016-05-01Author
Albuquerque, William
Department
Philosophy
Advisor(s)
Stan Husi
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Quasi-realism is a metaethical program seeking to 'earn the right' to realist moral discourse without positing mind-independent moral properties and facts. However, Sharon Street argues that if quasi-realism successfully captures realist discourse, it will find itself equally susceptible to the same objections as ordinary moral realism. But although Street argues extensively that epistemological challenges will carry over to quasi-realism, more argumentation is necessary to establish that quasi-realism is also vulnerable to metaphysical challenges. In this paper, I evaluate whether quasi-realism is susceptible to metaphysical challenges to moral realism by applying a particular metaphysical objection – J.L. Mackie's 'argument from queerness' – to Allan Gibbard and Simon Blackburn's quasi-realist projects. In the end, I conclude that quasi-realism can only escape metaphysical challenges at the cost of its principal aim; namely, earning the right to realist discourse. In this way, Street’s claim can be vindicated.
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http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/91050Type
thesis
