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Comments
on the "Naturalistic Fallacy"
by Mortimer J. Adler, Ph.D.
The refutation of naturalism in ethics rests on
the truth of two propositions: (1) that there is at
least one good to be sought entirely for its own
sake and not as a means to anything beyond itself;
and (2) that there is at least one categorical
ought that is self-evident. If these two
propositions are true, then it is impossible to
reduce all judgments of value or all ought
statements to statements of fact.
Among the philosophers who assert the truth of
these two propositions and who, in so doing, also
assert the relative or absolute autonomy of ethics,
some charge the naturalists or empiricists in
ethics with committing an error that has been
misnamed "the naturalistic fallacy." This has
beclouded the issue by introducing irrelevant
considerations; for the root error of the
naturalists does not consist in committing the
so-called naturalistic fallacy. Rather, it consists
in failing to recognize that an end can be ultimate
without being terminal -- a failure that leads the
naturalists to deny that there can be any end that
is not also a means.
It may be useful, nevertheless, to examine the
so-called "naturalistic fallacy"; by correcting the
mistake implicit in the formulation of it, we can
clarify the meaning of "good" without attempting to
define it. But, first, it is necessary to
distinguish two forms of the "naturalistic
fallacy," the one pointed out by David Hume in the
eighteenth century, the other by G. E. Moore at the
beginning of this century.
The logical fallacy to which Hume called
attention is formally similar to the violation of
the rule governing considerations of modality in
reasoning. It is logically invalid in reasoning to
infer a necessary conclusion from premises that are
contingent in their modality, or to assign
contingency to a conclusion that is inferred from
premises that are necessary in their modality. It
is similarly and just as obviously fallacious to
draw an ought-conclusion from premises that consist
entirely of is-statements; for the difference in
logical type between descriptive and normative
propositions is as great as, if not greater than,
the difference in modality between two descriptive
propositions.
That is why I regard the logical mistake pointed
out by Hume -- the violation of the rule that an
ought-statement cannot be validly inferred from
premises that are is-statements-as an analogue or
special form of the modal fallacy. I will have more
to say later about this special fallacy but, in
passing, it is worth remembering that Hume did not
discover it. It was explicitly recognized in
antiquity, and to my knowledge, no moral
philosopher of note-certainly none prior to the
eighteenth century-ever committed this error. None
is in fact named by Hume.
I wish to deal now with the other form of the
so-called "naturalistic fallacy" -- the form to
which attention has been called by Moore and which
has been made the subject of so much discussion in
the last sixty [ninety] -five years. Let me
say, first of all, that it has no logical
connection with the modal fallacy discussed by
Hume, which is truly a logical fallacy, and that,
in addition to not being a logical fallacy, it also
has no special relevance to naturalism. If there is
any error revealed in Moore's discussion of
attempts to define the good, it is the mistake that
Moore himself makes in supposing that definitions
are statements of identities.
No exception can be taken to Moore's endorsement
of Bishop Butler's observation that "everything is
what it is, and not another thing." A is A; it is
not non-A. But definitions, properly conceived,
never violate this law of identity. To say, for
example, that gold is a fusible metal is ' not to
say that gold is non-gold, but merely to offer the
defining properties of that which is gold.
If to define anything at all -- the good or
anything else -- one had to violate the law of
identity, then no definitions at all would be
logically valid, and every term would be
indefinable.
The question of the correctness in fact of a
particular definition is, of course, another
matter. While defining gold as a fusible metal does
not violate the law of identity, that by itself
does not assure us that fusibility is in fact a
defining property of the metal gold. On the other
hand, when that definition of gold is empirically
arrived at and accepted in the light of the
available evidence as factually correct, then it is
no longer an open question whether or not gold is
fusible. That question has been settled protem by
the establishment of the definition.
I have gone this far into the logic of
definitions in order to point out that Moore's much
vaunted "open-question argument," far from calling
attention to a logical fallacy or anything that has
a bearing on the relation of facts to values, was
merely his cryptic and contorted way of trying to
explain why he thought that the good is
indefinable. Moore was correct in this contention,
but this was hardly an original discovery on his
part, as it is sometimes mistakenly supposed. Only
massive ignorance of the theory of the good in the
first twenty or twenty-two centuries of Western
thought could have fostered that illusion. In
addition, the argument by which Moore tried to show
that the good is indefinable is itself based on a
misunderstanding both of definitions and of
indefinable terms.
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