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Confusion of Tongues

A Theory of Normative Language

Stephen Finlay 2014



Can normative words like “good,” “ought,” and “reason” be defined in entirely non-normative terms? Confusion of Tongues argues that they can, advancing a new End-Relational theory of the meaning of this language as providing the best explanation of the many different ways it is ordinarily used. Philosophers widely maintain that analyzing normative language as describing facts about relations cannot account for special features of particularly moral and deliberative uses of normative language, but Stephen Finlay argues that the End-Relational theory systematically explains these on the basis of a single fundamental principle of conversational pragmatics. These challenges comprise the central problems of metaethics, including the connection between normative judgment and motivation, the categorical character of morality, the nature of intrinsic value, and the possibility of normative disagreement. Finlay’s linguistic analysis has deep implications for the metaphysics, epistemology, and psychology of morality, as well as for the nature and possibility of normative ethical theory. Most significantly it supplies a nuanced answer to the ancient Euthyphro Question of whether we desire things because we judge them good, or vice versa. Normative speech and thought may ultimately be just a manifestation of our nature as intelligent animals motivated by contingent desires for various conflicting ends.


Review

“Stephen Finlay boldly attempts to undermine [the] pervasive assumption of irreducibility [in metaethics] by proposing and defending specific reductive analyses of ‘good’, ‘ought’, and ‘reason’… It is an audacious project, and the book is well written, carefully argued, and impressively thorough in its scholarship. As such, it sets a new agenda in metaethics and should be read by all metaethicists and anyone else interested in the semantics and pragmatics of normative language.”
–Matthew Chrisman, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
“Stephen Finlay has made an indispensable contribution to our understanding of normative, evaluative, and moral language…his broadly relativist approach offers an intellectually appealing alternative.”
The Philosophers’ Magazine
“This is a book that anyone with an interest in metaethics ought to read, and I recommend it very highly.”

Analysis 


About the Author

Stephen Finlay is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southern California. He is the author of a number of articles on metaethics and moral psychology. Originally from New Zealand, he lives in Pomona, California with his wife and three daughters.




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