Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä

Käännöksiä ei löytynyt valitulle kohdekielelle.

Määritelmät

Substantiivi

  1. (epistemology) The belief that certain disagreements (even about facts) ultimately stem from differing values, and therefore cannot be resolved as factual disagreements.

Esimerkit

  • One way to press the complaint is to make an unfavourable contrast between evaluativism in epistemology and evaluativism in moral theory.
  • Most who have argued for evaluativism have been interested in establishing skepticism, and have assumed that evaluativism implied skepticism.
  • [E]valutivism makes plain that any attempt to justify a rule (ultimately by a rule-circular argument) will be an attempt for rules we value and will depend on rules we value (our basic inferential rules).
  • There is prima facie something deeply unappealing about evaluativism: our intuitions rebel at the suggestion that reasonableness is 'not a factual property' and that '[i]n calling a rule reasonable we are evaluating it, and all that makes sense to ask about is what we value'.