What is your answer?
On prescriptivism, you'd pick out your moral principles by
{ 1 } - following society's prescriptions.
{ 2 } - following your feelings.
{ 3 } - trying to be informed and imaginative, and then seeing what you can consistently hold.
{ 4 } - following your most basic moral intuitions.
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Directions: Click on a number from 1 to 4.
1 is wrong. Please try again.
On prescriptivism, you'd pick out your moral principles by
{ 1 } - following society's prescriptions.
{ 2 } - following your feelings.
{ 3 } - trying to be informed and imaginative, and then seeing what you can consistently hold.
{ 4 } - following your most basic moral intuitions.
This is cultural relativism.
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2 is wrong. Please try again.
On prescriptivism, you'd pick out your moral principles by
{ 1 } - following society's prescriptions.
{ 2 } - following your feelings.
{ 3 } - trying to be informed and imaginative, and then seeing what you can consistently hold.
{ 4 } - following your most basic moral intuitions.
This is emotivism.
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3 is correct!
On prescriptivism, you'd pick out your moral principles by
{ 1 } - following society's prescriptions.
{ 2 } - following your feelings.
{ 3 } - trying to be informed and imaginative, and then seeing what you can consistently hold.
{ 4 } - following your most basic moral intuitions.
To think rationally about ethics is to think in a way that is informed, imaginative, and consistent. The most important part of consistency is to follow the golden rule.
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Before continuing, you might try some wrong answers.
4 is wrong. Please try again.
On prescriptivism, you'd pick out your moral principles by
{ 1 } - following society's prescriptions.
{ 2 } - following your feelings.
{ 3 } - trying to be informed and imaginative, and then seeing what you can consistently hold.
{ 4 } - following your most basic moral intuitions.
This is intuitionism.
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the end