Online Access
https://philpapers.org/rec/ROSSMI-3Abstract
This is an imagined dialogue between one of the more famous skeptics regarding moral attribution, Thrasymachus, and an imagined Socrates who, through the convenient miracle of time travel, returns to Athens after exposure to contemporary metaethics, now a devoted and formidable quasi-realist expressivist. The dialogue focuses on the characterization of moral conflict and moral justification available to the expressivist, and the authors attempt to lay out, so far as is possible through literary indirection, the distinctive strengths and weaknesses of the expressivist view.Date
2017Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:philpapers.org/rec/ROSSMI-3https://philpapers.org/rec/ROSSMI-3