Humean Constructivism and Deliberative Coherence

File(s)
Date
2019-05-01Author
Doche Linhares, Danilo
Department
Philosophy
Advisor(s)
Nataliya Palatnik
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
According to Humean constructivism in metaethics, there is no incoherence in holding that different agents should act on aims that are not co-possible. I will show that this commitment undermines Humean constructivists’ own treatment of normative judgments, where these judgments are meant to function both as prescriptions and assertions of fact. When ideally coherent Humeans engage others in conversation, their claims about others’ reasons to act function as imperatives rather than as assertions; conversely, when Humean reasoners think of those claims while deliberating on their own, they carry no prescriptive weight at all. In light of these issues, I propose that coherence in normative judgment should take into account the joint realizability of agents’ aims. To act on reasons involves acting on aims the agent thinks are worth pursuing. And actions whose aims are in conflict cannot be successfully performed together. I argue that where aims conflict, so do the prescriptions for acting on them.
Subject
Coherence
Humean constructivism
Metaethics
Practical reason
Pragmatics
Sharon Street
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/92091Type
thesis
