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Some brief thoughts on how the moral mechanism operates in creatures like us to highlight the link between sentiment and judgment . . . and show, thereby, that, at the level at which moral valuation kicks in, the two are tightly intertwined:
The place of ethics in our lives remains an important question in philosophy. Dealing with what is right or wrong in our dealings with others, ethical judgments seem to hinge on whether or not this or that claim of what is right or wrong can be true or false. If our conclusion is that such valuational claims cannot be, then nothing can be definitively characterized as right or wrong and pretty much anything goes. Of course, this is the way some of us sometimes approach the world, especially when we lose faith in the moral claims we’ve been taught from youth onwards, deeming these no more compelling than anyone's particular preferences. If my preferences are just as good as yours, or yours no better than mine, then why should I be guided in the choices I make by any preferences but my own? Or others be guided by mine? . . .