Episteme 15 (1):101-118 (
2018)
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Abstract
This paper presents a challenge to conciliationist views of disagreement. I argue
that conciliationists cannot satisfactorily explain why we need not revise our beliefs
in response to certain moral disagreements. Conciliationists can attempt to meet
this challenge in one of two ways. First, they can individuate disputes narrowly.
This allows them to argue that we have dispute-independent reason to distrust
our opponents’ moral judgment. This approach threatens to license objectionable
dogmatism. It also inappropriately gives deep epistemic significance to superficial
questions about how to think about the subject matter of a dispute. Second, conciliationists can individuate disputes widely. This allows them to argue that we lack
dispute-independent reason to trust our opponents’ moral judgment. But such
arguments fail; our background of generally shared moral beliefs gives us good reason
to trust the moral judgment of our opponents, even after we set quite a bit of
our reasoning aside. On either approach, then, conciliationists should acknowledge
that we have dispute-independent reason to trust the judgment of those
who reject our moral beliefs. Given a conciliationist view of disagreement’s epistemic
role, this has the unattractive result that we are epistemically required to
revise some of our most intuitively secure moral beliefs.