Moral Eliminativism: An End to Moralizing

Abstract

Terms such as “good” and “evil” are residues of a scientifically benighted worldview, often corrupted by intimations of the supernatural, and the phenomena that moral terms allegedly designate are no more substantial than phlogiston or witchery. Much as eliminative materialists like Paul and Patricia Churchland have attempted to banish the posits of “folk psychology” to the dustbin of history’s defunct and discarded theories, I hope to begin the relegation of moral terminology to humankind’s collective intellectual adolescence. It is prudent to leave moralizing behind, and to retain its memory as nothing more than a souvenir of quaint “folk normativity”. In other words, I hope to eliminate all talk of “morality” and to expose “moral facts” as chimeras, and “moral laws” as superfluous overlays without which we could readily, and comprehensively, describe the salient concerns of propriety regarding interpersonal interaction. In short, I contend that there is no such thing as “morality” and no need to resort to morality-speak. Indeed, the expression “moral fact” not only lacks any referent, it (as well as related terminology) is entirely eliminable in favor of more fundamental, more informative, and more thoroughly well-established features of the human condition. Let us, therefore, dispense with moralizing once and for all.

Author's Profile

William Ferraiolo
San Joaquin Delta College

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