This is why the following survey found a majority of moral philosophers are Moral Realists;The preceding section has given us some idea of what Moral realism is, what it is not, and what its main rivals are.
But what interest do these metaethical views hold, and is there any reason to believe one rather than another?
In many areas of dispute between realism and antirealism, realism [moral] is the natural metaphysical position.
We begin as realists about the external world or the unobservable entities mentioned in well confirmed scientific theories.
Generally, people become antirealists about these things (if they do) because they become convinced that realism is in some way naive and must be abandoned in the face of compelling metaphysical and epistemological objections.
So too, I think, in ethics.
We begin as (tacit) cognitivists and realists about ethics.
Moral claims make assertions, which can be true or false;
some people are morally more perceptive than others;
and people's moral views have not only changed over time but have improved in many cases (e.g., as regards slavery).
We are led to some form of antirealism (if we are) only because we come to regard the moral realist's commitments as untenable, say,
because of the apparently occult nature of moral facts or
because of the apparent lack of a well developed and respectable methodology in ethics.8
I think there is more to this dialectical picture than just a suggestive thumbnail sketch of the history of twentieth-century metaethics.
Moral realism should be our metaethical starting point, and we should give it up only if it does involve unacceptable metaphysical and epistemological commitments.
A survey from 2009 involving 3,226 respondents[6] found that 56% of philosophers accept or lean towards moral realism (28%: anti-realism; 16%: other).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_realism
Moral Realism claims there are moral facts which are supposedly mind-independent, proposition, truth-apt and thus objective just like scientific facts generated from the Scientific Framework and System.
Moral Realists claims comprised of 3 major types of facts;
(Brink, except the points in [] );
- 1. Ethical naturalism is the claim that moral facts and properties just are natural facts and properties.
2. Ethical supernaturalism claims that moral facts and properties just are supernatural facts and properties (e.g., facts about and properties of the will of a divine being).
3. Nonnaturalists such as Moore (1903), Broad (1930), Ross (1930), and Prichard (1949), however, claim that moral facts and properties are neither natural nor supernatural facts and properties; they [moral facts] are sui generis.
Platonic Ethical universals can included in this group.
Personally I believe moral facts claimed within 2 [from a God] and 3 [intuitive and platonic] are not tenable. There are loads of proofs to support my point.
The moral facts claimed within moral realism - ethical naturalism are the default and thus has to be accepted as such unless proven otherwise.
To reinforce this default position I have demonstrated in the various posts they are justifiable as moral facts.
Meanwhile the moral facts deniers like Peter Holmes, et. al. as in
Is morality objective or subjective? by Peter Holmes
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=24531
could only argue with flimsy words and semantics [inherited from the bastardized philosophy of the LPs] which don't give a dent to Moral Realism as the default and its justified moral facts.
The onus on the moral-facts-deniers to provide justifications why there are no moral facts which are like any other natural facts and properties as with the natural sciences and others.
Do you agree Moral Realism is the default within the domain of Morality and Ethics?
Views.