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nonalt's avatar

If we are going to try to make intuitionism work, we need to deal with the problem that sometimes our intuitions conflict (even within a single person). I guess it's fashionable to mention concepts like "reflective equilibrium" and then move on with life, but not many people appear to be really working on how to think about these things.

By the looks, Terry Hogan raises some interesting concerns about Bayesian epistemology:

https://thorgan.faculty.arizona.edu/sites/thorgan.faculty.arizona.edu/files/Troubles%20for%20Bayesian%20%20Formal%20Epistemology.pdf

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Carlos's avatar

Wait, if moral realism is true, doesn't it mean some philosopher one day will just pull a Moses and descend from the ivory tower bearing morality itself, that is, the correct moral positions to hold on every issue, and everyone will have to accept it, the way we are forced to accept the conclusions of science? And if that can't happen, then how can moral realism be true?

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