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prescriptivism
(redirected from prescriptivist)

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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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Hare's explanation of Golden Rule reasoning in universal prescriptivist terms.
ABSTRACT Early Modern English saw negative concord disappear from the mainstream textual record (Nevalainen 1998; Kallel 2005), which may embody natural language change rather than prescriptivist pressure (Mazzon 1994).
A prescriptivist would agree with an emotivist in that ethical statements do not have factual truth value but are attitudinal but would not agree with the emotivist that ethical statements should acceptable or not acceptable, but that an individual needs to control his or her emotions so that the individual can make principled judgments which can be universally applicable in making ethical decisions.
 
 
 
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