Non-naturalism is a form of what's known as 'objectivist' metaethical theory. 'Objective' in this context means 'exists as something other than subjective states'. Moore positively rejects the idea that morality could be made of our own - or someone else's - subjective states, for that would be to reduce morality to something else.
And Moore himself was a realist. A 'realist' about morality is someone who thinks morality exists. That is, moral objects and relations are real. — Bartricks
Moore’s non-naturalism comprised two main theses. One was the realist thesis that moral and more generally normative judgements – like many of his contemporaries, Moore did not distinguish the two – are true or false objectively, or independently of any beliefs or attitudes we may have. The other was the autonomy-of-ethics thesis that moral judgements are sui generis, neither reducible to nor derivable from non-moral, for example scientific or metaphysical, judgements; they express a distinctive kind of objective truth. Closely connected to his non-naturalism was the epistemological view that our knowledge of moral truths is intuitive, in the sense that it is not arrived at by inference from non-moral truths but rests on our recognizing certain moral propositions as self-evident, by a kind of direct or immediate insight. — SEP
To say that something in inherently intuitive (such as morality in Moore's case) seems to indicate that what moral claims represent are at least very subjective states, that are commensurably agreed upon. Do you think that's something correct to state? — Shawn
The word "good" is mostly used to indicate a satisfactory level or degree of something, based on commonly or generally accepted standards. It is applied to both quality and quantity: Good food, good joke, good essay, good news, good health, good friend, ... — Alkis Piskas
Why running in circles? I can only see a straight line! :grin:Well, instead of running in circles, what does that something mean? — Shawn
That is why Aristotle proposed "happiness" as the end which breaks the infinite regress — Metaphysician Undercover
I fear that doesn't work. Why is happiness good? — Agent Smith
is avoided, since the "why" is an illegitimate question, a grammatical error, a misunderstanding of what ""...is good" does.If X is good because X is beneficial, why is beneficial good? If the response is beneficial is good because it enhances cooperation, we can then ask, why is enhancing cooperation good? So on and so forth ad infinitum/ad nauseum. — Agent Smith
Why is happiness good? — Agent Smith
Moore's "intuitionism" was only that moral truths are not derived from any other sorts of truths. That is, it is an error to ask for a reason to conclude that something is morally good.
So no, nothing much to do with the nonsense of Platonic forms. — Banno
Seems to me that introducing Plato only servers to add more fog. — Banno
I am pleased to believe that this is the most Platonic system of modern times. (Hylton, p. 137)
Hence Moore's version of realism, as it claimed the constituents of reality to be unchangeable non-spatial non-temporal entities with which we are in contact only in thought, is a kind of Platonism.
Both those quotes appear to be about Moore's realism with regard to the physical world, rather than about his intuitionism with regard to good. — Banno
To say, as he did, that goodness is a non-natural property detected only by intuition, i.e. by thought and not by perception, is to treat it as a Platonic entity, inhabiting some transcendent realm of being.)
Ok, other folk have shared that interpretation. But did Moore? — Banno
at odds with Moore's rejection of idealism. — Banno
Moore simply denied that "fundamental presupposition of any sort of Idealism" by asserting that "the objects of knowledge [are] completely independent of us."
Iris Murdoch's idea of metaphysics more like that of Plato than like Aristotle's referring to what she called "the inner life" of imagining The Good (love) instead of as a logical demonstration of "The Absolute" (truth) ...
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