I don't understand. So is it good or not good? The distinction you make erodes the meaning of "good" and makes it meaningless. Good is an absolute word, unless otherwise specified. "It is a good SUV" means that the SUV is good, if it should mean that it is a complete SUV you'd write that it is a complete SUV. Naturalistic Fallacy.Diogenes wrote:Nope. The natural fallacy would be if Prof approved of something simply because it was "good" (i.e. exemplifies its nature).The Voice of Time wrote:Anyone else smells natural fallacy here?
The SUV example should have clued you into this; Prof's hypothetical environmentalist notes that the SUV is "good" (meaning, it is an exemplary instantiation of the general concept "SUV") and that the very fact that it is a good SUV makes it an evil (due to its contributions to climate change, etc).
The naturalistic fallacy would be to assume that because the SUV is good, it is therefore worthy of our approval.
From Wikipedia, a quotation from Moore himself:
...the assumption that because some quality or combination of qualities invariably and necessarily accompanies the quality of goodness, or is invariably and necessarily accompanied by it, or both, this quality or combination of qualities is identical with goodness. If, for example, it is believed that whatever is pleasant is and must be good, or that whatever is good is and must be pleasant, or both, it is committing the naturalistic fallacy to infer from this that goodness and pleasantness are one and the same quality. The naturalistic fallacy is the assumption that because the words 'good' and, say, 'pleasant' necessarily describe the same objects, they must attribute the same quality to them.