Abstract
There are ways that ethical intuitions might be, and the various possibilities have epistemic
ramifications. This paper criticizes some extant accounts of what ethical intuitions are and how
they justify, and it offers an alternative account. Roughly, an ethical intuition that p is a kind of
seeming state constituted by a consideration whether p, attended by positive phenomenological
qualities that count as evidence for p, and so a reason to believe that p. They are distinguished
from other kinds of seemings, such as those which are content driven (e.g., the sensory
experience that a stick in water seems bent) and those which are competence driven (e.g., the
intellectual seeming that XYZ is not water, or that one of DeMorgan’s laws is true). One
important conclusion is this: when crafting a positive theory of justification ethical intuitionists
have fewer resources than intuitionists in other domains, not because of the subject matter of
ethical intuitions, but because of the their structure. A second conclusion is that the seemings
featured in substantive ethical intuitions deliver relatively weak justification as compared to
other seeming states.