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Title: Of Dictators and Greengrocers
Subtitle: On the Repressive Grammar of Values-Discourse
Author(s): BACKSTRÖM, Joel
Journal: Ethical Perspectives
Volume: 22    Issue: 1   Date: 2015   
Pages: 39-67
DOI: 10.2143/EP.22.1.3073457

Abstract :
The present contribution questions the seemingly self-evident idea that morality is, most basically, about values and valuation. Values are indeed pervasive in moral life, but they are not original phenomena; rather, they are repressive responses to a sense of good and evil beyond values. This ‘beyond’ relates, I argue, to the encounter between individual human beings, and values function to manage and mask the inescapability and difficulty of this encounter, with its unbearable either-or of openness to, or refusal of, the other; of love or destructiveness. Various manifestations of the inherently problematic character of values- thinking are examined, e.g. its inextricable intertwinement with social pressure, moralism, and egocentric concern. I also discuss the relation of shared ‘moral languages’ to moral understanding, and the way in which a Wittgensteinian, strictly descriptive ethics can nonetheless challenge not only theories of morality, but our moral life itself.

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