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#13 Sarah McGrath: Are there moral experts?

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Manage episode 452255808 series 3503557
Innhold levert av with Leah Pierson and Sophie Gibert, With Leah Pierson, and Sophie Gibert. Alt podcastinnhold, inkludert episoder, grafikk og podcastbeskrivelser, lastes opp og leveres direkte av with Leah Pierson and Sophie Gibert, With Leah Pierson, and Sophie Gibert eller deres podcastplattformpartner. Hvis du tror at noen bruker det opphavsrettsbeskyttede verket ditt uten din tillatelse, kan du følge prosessen skissert her https://no.player.fm/legal.

In this episode, we speak with Dr. Sarah McGrath, professor of philosophy at Princeton University. We discuss whether and when it makes sense to defer to others about the answers to moral questions, whether moral deference is any less appropriate than deference in other domains, like math or science, and whether we have reason to think bioethicists are moral experts.

(00:00) Our introduction
(04:28) Interview begins
(08:02) Varieties of moral deference: pure versus impure
(12:39) Outline of Sarah’s view and argument
(20:58) The (ir)relevance of meta-ethics (what ethics is and where it comes from)
(41:13) How to identify moral experts
(50:37) Are utilitarians likely to be moral experts?
(52:32) Does education in moral philosophy make you an expert?
(1:01:18) Practical implications: endowing bioethicists with authority
(1:14:55) Why talk of optimism and pessimism is misguided

Mentioned or referenced:

Bio(un)ethical is a bioethics podcast written and edited by Leah Pierson and Sophie Gibert, with production support by Audiolift.co. Our music is written by Nina Khoury and performed by Social Skills. We are supported by a grant from Amplify Creative Grants.

  continue reading

Kapitler

1. #13 Sarah McGrath: Are there moral experts? (00:00:00)

2. Interview begins (00:04:28)

3. Varieties of moral deference (00:08:02)

4. Outline of Sarah's view and argument (00:12:39)

5. The (ir)relevance of meta-ethics (what ethics is and where it comes from) (00:20:58)

6. How to identify moral experts (00:41:13)

7. Are utilitarians likely to be moral experts? (00:50:37)

8. Does education in moral philosophy make you an expert? (00:52:32)

9. Practical implications: endowing bioethicists with authority (01:01:18)

10. Why talk of optimism and pessimism is misguided (01:14:55)

14 episoder

Artwork
iconDel
 
Manage episode 452255808 series 3503557
Innhold levert av with Leah Pierson and Sophie Gibert, With Leah Pierson, and Sophie Gibert. Alt podcastinnhold, inkludert episoder, grafikk og podcastbeskrivelser, lastes opp og leveres direkte av with Leah Pierson and Sophie Gibert, With Leah Pierson, and Sophie Gibert eller deres podcastplattformpartner. Hvis du tror at noen bruker det opphavsrettsbeskyttede verket ditt uten din tillatelse, kan du følge prosessen skissert her https://no.player.fm/legal.

In this episode, we speak with Dr. Sarah McGrath, professor of philosophy at Princeton University. We discuss whether and when it makes sense to defer to others about the answers to moral questions, whether moral deference is any less appropriate than deference in other domains, like math or science, and whether we have reason to think bioethicists are moral experts.

(00:00) Our introduction
(04:28) Interview begins
(08:02) Varieties of moral deference: pure versus impure
(12:39) Outline of Sarah’s view and argument
(20:58) The (ir)relevance of meta-ethics (what ethics is and where it comes from)
(41:13) How to identify moral experts
(50:37) Are utilitarians likely to be moral experts?
(52:32) Does education in moral philosophy make you an expert?
(1:01:18) Practical implications: endowing bioethicists with authority
(1:14:55) Why talk of optimism and pessimism is misguided

Mentioned or referenced:

Bio(un)ethical is a bioethics podcast written and edited by Leah Pierson and Sophie Gibert, with production support by Audiolift.co. Our music is written by Nina Khoury and performed by Social Skills. We are supported by a grant from Amplify Creative Grants.

  continue reading

Kapitler

1. #13 Sarah McGrath: Are there moral experts? (00:00:00)

2. Interview begins (00:04:28)

3. Varieties of moral deference (00:08:02)

4. Outline of Sarah's view and argument (00:12:39)

5. The (ir)relevance of meta-ethics (what ethics is and where it comes from) (00:20:58)

6. How to identify moral experts (00:41:13)

7. Are utilitarians likely to be moral experts? (00:50:37)

8. Does education in moral philosophy make you an expert? (00:52:32)

9. Practical implications: endowing bioethicists with authority (01:01:18)

10. Why talk of optimism and pessimism is misguided (01:14:55)

14 episoder

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