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Moral Realism and the Incompletability of Morality

2017, The Journal of Value Inquiry

Abstract

The core claim of moral realism, one of the major approaches in contemporary meta-ethics, is that moral or ethical 1 statements are true or false independently of what human beings think of them. That is to say, to almost any moral or ethical question that we may ask, say, whether letting someone die under certain circumstances in order to save our own life is morally permissible, or whether having a great career is sufficient to have a good life, there is a correct answer that is ''out there'' awaiting discovery, and the correctness of that answer has nothing to do with what we might think about the matter. Some realists articulate this core idea by positing a distinctively moral (i.e. non-natural) ''realm'' consisting of ''moral facts'', whereas others purport to locate the so-called objective ''moral facts'' in the natural world. Why would anyone be a realist? Well, many philosophers believe that some sort of realism is necessary to vindicate moral discourse and inquiry. We ask moral questions, and in many cases we take the answers to them very seriously (often acting against our interests, sometimes even risking our own lives, based on a moral judgment that it is the right thing to do). But, the realists argue, such moral inquiry would be pointless, or groundless, unless there were correct answers to our moral questions that held independently of our opinions about them. If there is nothing to & Melis Erdur