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  1. Sep 30, 2022 · 5 answers. Jul 20, 2017. Power and dominance are two crucial factors in critical pragmatic studies as well as critical discourse ones.However, approaching them differs from one field of study to ...

  2. Nov 22, 2023 · Ethical absolutism is a position which argues for the existence of objective values and intrinsically moral acts. As such there can exist moral principles which are always valid and correct. Ethical relativism is a position that holds that moral values are relative to some further instance.

  3. METAETHICS. Judgments to the effect that certain things (or certain classes of things) are good or bad, right or wrong, or just or unjust, are first-order ethical judgments. Metaethics addresses second-order questions about the meaning and status of moral judgments, for example, "What does it mean to say that something is good or bad, or right ...

  4. A moral theory which holds that individuals must decide what is ethical based on their own feelings about what is right and wrong. ethical subjectivism. The meta-ethical view which claims that: Ethical sentences express propositions. Some such propositions are true. Those propositions are about the attitudes of people.

  5. The word “relativism” has been applied to many different positions in philosophy. This chapter focuses on a contemporary version of relativism. According to this version of relativism, truth is relative, and not just in the familiar sense that sentences that contain indexicals can have different truth-values relative to different contexts.

  6. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like According to the "Metaethics Crash Course" video, ethics is a branch of philosophy that studies, According to the "Metaethics Crash Course" video, moral subjectivism means that there are no moral facts, just ..., Select ALL OF THE ANSWERS below that are flaws of normative cultural relativism, according to the "Metaethics Crash ...

  7. Meta-ethics: addresses questions about first-order (normative) ethical judgments, e.g., about the nature of morality; the meaning of moral talk; whether morality is absolute or relative; whether moral judgments can be true or false (objective) or merely subjective, how we can have knowledge of moral truth. 2. The Problem of Moral Relativism