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Quiop's avatar

Shafer-Landau correctly points out that anti-realism about normativity can't be easily contained. If you are going to be an anti-realist about normativity, you should probably be an anti-realist about many of the issues discussed in contemporary philosophy.

This applies especially to the "Three Ms" (morality, modality, and meaning), but not only to them. For example, let P = "There are no stance-independent normative facts."

You assert that P is true. P is a descriptive rather than a normative claim, so there are no concerns about (meta-)metanormativity here. But would you say the truth of P is stance-independent or stance-dependent?

If you say it is stance-independent, then you owe your critics an explanation of why your arguments against the stance-independence of normative truths do not also undermine the stance-independence of P.

If you say that P (and comparable philosophical claims) are only stance-dependently true, then it sounds like you are saying there are no "real" philosophical truths. This is fine as far as it goes, but it will upset people whose intellectual and emotional investment in the discipline and practice of philosophy rests on the assumption that it is worth spending time figuring out which philosophical claims are "really" true or false.

(Personally I think something like Huw Price's "global expressivism" offers the most promising solution to all these problems, although I confess I haven't taken the time to work through all the details, objections and counterobjections.)

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