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prescriptivism

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prescriptivism

In metaethics, the view that moral judgments are prescriptions and therefore have the logical form of imperatives. Prescriptivism was first advocated by Richard M. Hare (born 1919) in The Language of Morals (1952). Hare argued that it is impossible to derive any prescription from a set of descriptive sentences, but tried nevertheless to provide a foothold for moral reasoning in the constraint that moral judgments must be “universalizable”: that is, that if one judges a particular action to be wrong, one must also judge any relevantly similar action to be wrong. Universalizability is not a substantive moral principle but a logical feature of the moral terms: anyone who uses such terms as “right” and “ought” is logically committed to universalizability.



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Among these is the potential for instructors to extend rigid prescriptivism to the level of the text, insisting for example, that all instances of writing in a particular genre must conform to one specific structure and set of grammatical features.
Prescriptivism has to contend with weakness of the will--with the fact, as Hare memorably puts it, that we are wont to take moral holidays.
Rather than being overly concerned with prescriptivism, a functional approach to grammar can help teachers to show how words and grammatical structures work to create meaning.
 
 
 
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