Central and East European
Society for Phenomenology

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236090

What ought probably means, and why you can't detach it

Stephen Finlay

pp. 67-89

Abstract

Some intuitive normative principles raise vexing ‘detaching problems’ by their failure to license modus ponens. I examine three such principles (a self-reliance principle and two different instrumental principles) and recent stategies employed to resolve their detaching problems. I show that solving these problems necessitates postulating an indefinitely large number of senses for ‘ought’. The semantics for ‘ought’ that is standard in linguistics offers a unifying strategy for solving these problems, but I argue that an alternative approach combining an end-relational theory of normativity with a comparative probabilistic semantics for ‘ought’ provides a more satisfactory solution.

Publication details

Published in:

(2010) Synthese 177 (1).

Pages: 67-89

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-009-9640-7

Full citation:

Finlay Stephen (2010) „What ought probably means, and why you can't detach it“. Synthese 177 (1), 67–89.