Syracuse University SURFACE Dissertations - ALL SURFACE July 2016 Seeing Right from Wrong: A Defense of A Posteriori Ethical Intuitionism Preston John Werner Syracuse University Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/etd Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons Recommended Citation Werner, Preston John, "Seeing Right from Wrong: A Defense of A Posteriori Ethical Intuitionism" (2016). Dissertations - ALL. 532. https://surface.syr.edu/etd/532 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the SURFACE at SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations - ALL by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact
[email protected]. Preston J. Werner Seeing What’s Right and Wrong: A Defense of A Posteriori Ethical Intuitionism Dissertation Abstract This dissertation develops and defends A Posteriori Ethical Intuitionism, the view that our epistemic access to moral properties is grounded in perceptual experience. It contains two parts. In part I, I present the epistemic access problem for realist moral epistemology and argue against several a priori attempts to resolve it. In part II, I defend A Posteriori Ethical Intuitionism and its ability to resolve the epistemic access problem. Part I begins by arguing that evolutionary debunking arguments are best understood as claiming that we lack epistemic access to mind-independent moral facts. The remainder of part I rejects several attempts to respond to this challenge. I first argue that even sophisticated versions of reflective equilibrium, as coherentist theories, fall victim to a “garbage in, garbage out” objection. I conclude that a proper solution to the epistemic access problem must be foundationalist.