Ethical Subjectivsim
Ethical subjectivism
Ethical subjectivism could also be called 'relativism,' or the notion that there is no external, objective moral authority. We as humans create our ethical norms, and ethics are culturally contextual. Ethical subjectivism stands in contrast to objectivism, which holds that there are objective moral standards by which all moral actions should be judged. "Moral statements are made true or false by the attitudes and/or conventions of the observers, and any ethical sentence just implies an attitude, opinion, personal preference or feeling held by someone" (Ethical subjectivism, 2012, Philosophy Basics).
A good example of this can be seen in the pragmatic philosophy of William James. In his Varieties of Religious Experience, James argued that all faiths were effectively divided into two categories: that of the 'religion of healthy-mindedness' and the 'sick soul. "We have all known or met people who seem happy all the time, who are convinced of the essential goodness of life, who radiate a certain enthusiasm and cheer... There are those, on the other hand, who are painfully conscious of evil in the world. They tend to be discontented, alienated, divided" (The healthy-minded and the sick soul, 2012, Philosophical Society). Neither view is inherently 'right,' according to James, rather the different perspectives are fundamentally rooted in the temperament of the individuals in question, not any objective reality of the universe.
Ethical subjectivists believe that it is impossible to say that a certain thing is 'good' or 'bad' in the abstract. It is possible to say whether...
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