Disentangling Facts and Values: an Analysis of Putnam’s Pragmatic Ethics

Authors

  • Darlei Dall’Agnol Departamento de Filosofia Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina/CNPq Florianópolis, SC BRASIL

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/1808-1711.2013v17n2p265

Abstract

In several important works in ethics, Hillary Putnam criticizes the traditional fact/value dichotomy, which is based on the Humean question whether ought follows from is. More recently, Putnam even declared the collapse of this dichotomy calling once again for rethinking the last dogma of empiricism, namely the positivist creed that facts are objective and values are subjective. The aim of this work is to reassess Putnam’s main arguments to show the entanglement between facts and values. Putnam is right in many of his criticisms, but it is not clear also how he avoids reductionist monistic naturalism, which he considers an “inadequate philosophy”. Using his pragmatic pluralism inspired by Wittgenstein, I will try to show that we have reasons to make a distinction between facts and values.

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Published

2013-08-31

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Section

Articles