Expressivism: A Concise Defence

Abstract

This book is a defense of the view that the distinctive feature of a normative statement is the expression of an attitude. Moral statements are a sub-class of normative statements: (roughly) those that express both an attitude AND the proposition that this attitude is of a certain type (related to such things as kindness, compassion and honesty). Much attention is devoted to the 'Frege/Geach problem', and an 'inferentialist' approach is developed to deal with this. As far as the truth and falsity of normative statements is concerned, it is argued that they may be regarded as truth-apt in a broad sense, but not (always) in a narrower sense, pertaining to 'mind-to-world fit'. The book considers alternatives to the expressivist theory, but finds them all wanting. It also considers how we should view the practice of attempting to develop moral theories in light of the truth of expressivism. The concluding chapter looks at such issues as the nature of normative disagreement and the relevance of expressivism to belief in God.

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Howard Simmons
McMaster University (PhD)

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