Morally Serious Critics of Moral Intuitions
Article first published online: 17 DEC 2002
DOI: 10.1111/1467-9329.00077
Blackwell Publishers Ltd. 1999
Additional Information
How to Cite
Nelson, M. (1999), Morally Serious Critics of Moral Intuitions. Ratio, 12: 54–79. doi: 10.1111/1467-9329.00077
Publication History
- Issue published online: 17 DEC 2002
- Article first published online: 17 DEC 2002
- Abstract
- Cited By
I characterize moral intuitionism as the methodological claim that one may legitimately appeal to moral judgments in the course of moral reasoning even when those judgments are not supported by inference from other judgments. I describe two patterns of criticism of this method: ‘morally unserious’ criticisms, which hold that ‘morality is bunk’, so appeals to moral intuitions are bunk as well; and ‘morally serious’ criticisms, which hold that morality is not bunk, but that appeals to moral intuition are nonetheless misguided. I consider morally serious criticisms of Kantian and Aristotelian provenance, but defend the intuitionist method from both.

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