
Contents
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I. Plato’s Quest: The Analysis of Moral Concepts I. Plato’s Quest: The Analysis of Moral Concepts
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II. Morally Relevant Difference Arguments II. Morally Relevant Difference Arguments
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III. Categorization and Concepts III. Categorization and Concepts
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IV. Some Alternative Models for the Mental Representation of Moral Systems IV. Some Alternative Models for the Mental Representation of Moral Systems
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References References
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5 Moral Philosophy and Mental Representation
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Published:August 2012
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Abstract
This chapter is organized as follows. Sections I and II sketch two of the projects frequently pursued by moral philosophers, and the methods typically invoked in those projects. It is argued that these projects presuppose (or at least suggest) a particular sort of account of the mental representation of human value systems, since the methods make sense only if we assume a certain kind of story about how the human mind stores information about values. The burden of the argument in Section III will be that while the jury is still out, there is some evidence suggesting that this account of mental representation is mistaken. If it is mistaken, it follows that two of the central methods of moral philosophy may have to be substantially modified, or perhaps abandoned, and that the goals philosophers have sought to achieve with these methods may themselves be misguided. Section IV takes a brief look at a rather different project in moral philosophy—a project that is compatible with a wide range of theories about the structures subserving mental representation. But to pursue the project seriously, it is necessary to determine which of these theories is correct. And that is a job requiring input from anthropologists, linguists, artificial intelligence researchers, and cognitive psychologists as well as philosophers. If this is right, a surprising redrawing of traditional disciplinary boundaries is in order. For a central project in ethics will turn out to be located squarely within the domain of cognitive science.
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