moral supervenience
Moral supervenience refers to the idea that moral truths or judgments depend entirely on non-moral facts or properties. In other words, it implies that the moral status or evaluations of actions, behaviors, or situations are determined by underlying non-moral facts, such as societal norms, consequences, intentions, or ethical frameworks.
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Related Concepts (1)
Similar Concepts
- aesthetic supervenience
- biological supervenience
- conceptual supervenience
- epistemic supervenience
- intensional supervenience
- mental supervenience
- moral determinism
- moral influence
- moral intuitionism
- moral relativism
- moral subjectivity
- moral supremacy
- non-reductive supervenience
- psychological supervenience
- social supervenience