Moral Skepticism
Positions denying that we have moral knowledge or that any moral beliefs are justified.
Definition
Moral scepticism, in its epistemological form, is the view that no one has moral knowledge, or more weakly that no moral belief is epistemically justified; it is distinguished from the metaphysical scepticism of the error theory, which denies that there are moral facts.
Scope
This topic surveys epistemological moral scepticism — the family of views holding that we lack moral knowledge or justified moral belief — and distinguishes it from metaphysical scepticism (error theory) and Pyrrhonian variants. It examines the principal sceptical arguments from disagreement, regress, and evolutionary debunking, and the strategies used to resist them, including reliabilist and modest-foundationalist replies.
Core questions
- Is moral scepticism a claim about knowledge, about justification, or about moral facts?
- Do regress and disagreement arguments establish that moral beliefs are unjustified?
- Do evolutionary debunking arguments undermine the reliability of moral belief?
- Can moderate foundationalism or reliabilism answer the sceptic?
Key concepts
- epistemological vs. metaphysical skepticism
- regress problem
- Pyrrhonism
- debunking arguments
- contrastivism
Key theories
- Pyrrhonian and dogmatic moral skepticism
- Sinnott-Armstrong distinguishes varieties of moral scepticism and defends a moderate Pyrrhonian scepticism about moral knowledge while allowing some justified moral belief on a contrastivist account.
- Evolutionary debunking
- If our moral beliefs are products of evolutionary pressures unconnected to moral truth, their reliability is undercut, supporting scepticism about moral knowledge.
History
Moral scepticism has ancient roots in Pyrrhonism and the relativizing reports of the sophists. In modern metaethics it is sharpened by Mackie's queerness and relativity arguments, by Sinnott-Armstrong's systematic taxonomy of moral scepticisms (2006), and by the evolutionary debunking arguments developed by Joyce and Street.
Debates
- The reach of debunking arguments
- Debunkers argue evolutionary origins undermine the justification of moral belief; critics reply that genealogical claims do not by themselves show beliefs false or unjustified, and that some moral beliefs may track truth.
- Justification without certainty
- Anti-sceptics argue that moral beliefs can be justified even if not indubitable, using modest foundationalism or reliabilism; Sinnott-Armstrong's contrastivism reframes when scepticism does and does not bite.
Key figures
- Walter Sinnott-Armstrong
- J. L. Mackie
- Richard Joyce
Related topics
Seminal works
- mackie1977
- sinnottarmstrong2006
- joyce2006
Frequently asked questions
- Is the moral sceptic saying nothing is really right or wrong?
- Not necessarily. Epistemological moral scepticism is about whether we can know or justifiably believe moral claims; it leaves open whether there are moral facts. The view that there are no moral facts is the separate metaphysical thesis of the error theory.