Norms from nature etiological functions as normative standards

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo su rivistaArticolo in rivistapeer review

Abstract

When we say that the function of a knife is cutting, we open the door to evaluating knives based on how well they cut. The aim of the paper is to investigate whether functions ground normative standards. This is an exciting question, as it would highlight the important existence of one instance of non-moral normativity and investigate to what degree it involves a trade off with it. Additionally, insofar as it depends on a naturalistic account of functions, functional normativity may be an obvious candidate of non-linguistic normativity that the special issue aims to investigate. The article will frst investigate what functions are, providing an etiological account that explains functional attributions for artefacts, as well as biological and social functions. It then discusses how failing to discharge a function results in malfunctioning, not in losing the function. Finally, it argues that functions so understood provide normative standards, independent of moral norms.

Lingua originaleInglese
pagine (da-a)188-197
Numero di pagine10
RivistaPhenomenology and Mind
Volume17
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 15 dic 2019

Fingerprint

Entra nei temi di ricerca di 'Norms from nature etiological functions as normative standards'. Insieme formano una fingerprint unica.

Cita questo