3.8 Article

A Buddhist approach to moral knowledge without god

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Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11153-023-09898-7

Keywords

Buddhism; Metaethics; Moral realism; Naturalism; Theism

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Noah McKay presents a novel argument claiming that theism provides a more plausible explanation for humans' ability to obtain correct moral beliefs compared to naturalism. However, his central contention regarding the limited plausible explanations in naturalism is incorrect as various Buddhist traditions offer a naturalistic explanation that is equally valid.
Noah McKay provides a novel argument for theism over naturalism. The argument is novel because it connects metaphysical issues to issues regarding moral epistemology. The connection concerns the power of theism and naturalism, respectively, to explain the human capacity to obtain correct beliefs about the domain of morality. The gist of McKay's argument is that theism provides a much more plausible account of this capacity than naturalism. The reason for this superiority, according to McKay, is that theism secures an intimate connection between human moral intuitions and truths within the domain of morality while naturalistic explanations sever the connection between human moral intuitions and truths within the domain of morality. A central contention of McKay's argument is that there are exactly two plausible and naturalistic explanations for the content of human moral intuitions-one appealing to evolutionary considerations, the other appealing to social conventions. I argue that this contention is incorrect. Some Buddhist traditions locate veridical moral intuitions in a kind of experience available to those who achieve freedom from ignorance and attachment. This explanation is naturalistic (as McKay understands that term) and no less plausible than the theistic explanation that McKay considers.

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