BerryPick6 comments on Philosophy Needs to Trust Your Rationality Even Though It Shouldn't - Less Wrong

27 Post author: lukeprog 29 November 2012 09:00PM

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Comment author: Peterdjones 30 November 2012 09:53:01AM *  5 points [-]

Deontology doens't mean "follow any rules" or "follow given rules" or "be law abiding". A deontologist can reject purported moral rules, just as a virtue theorist does not have to accept that copulaing with as many women as possible is "manly virtue", just as a value theorist does not have to value blind patriotism. Etc.

ETA:

Surely they can't be decided deontologically?

Meta-ethical systems ususally don't supply their own methdology. Deontologists usually work out rules based on some specific deontological meta-rule or "maxim", such as "follow on that rule one would wish to be universal law". Deontologies may vary according to the selection of maxim.

Comment author: BerryPick6 30 November 2012 10:55:46AM *  3 points [-]

Further, many philosophers think that Meta-Ethics and Normative Ethics can have sort of a "hard barrier" between them, so that one's meta-ethical view may have no impact at all upon one's acceptance of Deontology or Deontological systems.

EDIT: For the record, I think this is pretty ridiculous, but it's worth noting that people believe it.