Reply to Horta: Spectrum Arguments, the “Unhelpfulness” of Rejecting Transitivity, and Implications for Moral Realism

This article responds to Oscar Horta’s article “In Defense of the Internal Aspects View: Person-Affecting Reasons, Spectrum Arguments and Inconsistent Intuitions”. I begin by noting various points of agreement with Horta. I agree that the “better than relation” is asymmetric, and point out that this...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Larry Temkin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitat Pompeu Fabra 2015-09-01
Series:Law, Ethics and Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://raco.cat/index.php/LEAP/article/view/297560
Description
Summary:This article responds to Oscar Horta’s article “In Defense of the Internal Aspects View: Person-Affecting Reasons, Spectrum Arguments and Inconsistent Intuitions”. I begin by noting various points of agreement with Horta. I agree that the “better than relation” is asymmetric, and point out that this will be so on an Essentially Comparative View as well as on an Internal Aspects View. I also agree that there are various possible Person- Affecting Principles, other than the one my book focuses on, that people might find plausible, and that in some circumstances, at least, these might have deontological, rather than axiological significance. In particular, I grant that Horta’s Actuality-Dependent Person-Affecting Principle, his Time-Dependent Person-Affecting Principle, and his Identity-Dependent Person-Affecting Principle, might each be relevant to what we ought to do, without necessarily being relevant to which of two outcomes is better. But I reject Horta’s claim that essentially comparative principles don’t apply in Spectrum Arguments. I also argue against Horta’s view that the two Standard Views that underlie our intuitions in Spectrum Arguments are contradictory. I question Horta’s (seeming) position that there is no point in rejecting the transitivity of the “better than” relation on the basis of Spectrum Arguments, on the grounds that doing so won’t solve the predicament that Spectrum Arguments pose. Finally, I conclude my paper by challenging Horta’s interesting contention that my views about nontransitivity support an anti-realist metaethics, and are incompatible with the sort of realist approach to metaethics that I favor.
ISSN:2341-1465