This is a short follow-up to my last post on esoteric morality. In this last post, I discussed the relevance of the view that morality can be esoteric in the context of decision-making under risk. I argued that because the right attitudes toward risk are unlikely to be determined by any moral theory and because most moral decision-making is made under risk, the view is implausible. Here, I shall briefly consider whether this view makes sense at all.
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Parfit, Esoteric Morality, and…
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This is a short follow-up to my last post on esoteric morality. In this last post, I discussed the relevance of the view that morality can be esoteric in the context of decision-making under risk. I argued that because the right attitudes toward risk are unlikely to be determined by any moral theory and because most moral decision-making is made under risk, the view is implausible. Here, I shall briefly consider whether this view makes sense at all.