Abstract
Matti Eklund (2017) has argued that ardent realists face a serious dilemma. Ardent realists believe
that there is a mind-independent fact as to which normative concepts we are to use. Eklund claims that the
ardent realist cannot explain why this is so without plumping in favor of their own normative concepts or
changing the topic. The paper first advances the discussion by clarifying two ways of understanding the question
of which normative concepts to choose: a theoretical question about which concepts have the abstract property
of being normatively privileged and a further practical question of which concepts we are to choose even granting
some concepts are thus privileged. I argue that the ardent realist’s best bet for answering the theoretical question
while avoiding Eklund’s dilemma is to provide a real definition of this property. I point out the difficulties for
providing such a definition. I then argue that even with an answer to the theoretical question, the ardent realist
faces a further dilemma in answering the practical question. In sum, though I see no knock-down argument
against ardent realism, it may nonetheless die a death by a thousand cuts. I close by considering a deeper reason
for why ardent realism is so difficult to defend: every argument starts somewhere. It is unclear how there can
be an Archimedean point that makes no reference to any normative concepts that can nonetheless be employed
to convince everyone to adopt ours. I then briefly propose two options for someone still inclined towards
realism: (i) accept that our normative concepts are normatively privileged without attempting to explain why
this is so, or (ii) be less ardent and accept a perspective-dependent account of normativity.