Tag Archives: moral character

being judgmental: imprudent and vicious

Peo­ple seem to like to claim that they aren’t judg­men­tal. Espe­cially the hip, young, urban, lib­eral peo­ple who I encounter reg­u­larly. What’s wrong with being judg­men­tal, any­way? There are at least two aspects to it, I think which maybe get con­flated. On the one hand, some­times the bad­ness of being judg­men­tal gets explained some­thing like

snapshots of moral character

Here is my very late reply to Jim on skep­ti­cism about moral char­ac­ter. The short answer: No, in all my mod­er­ately exten­sive read­ing on this sub­ject, I have not found any “stud­ies that actu­ally involve the obser­va­tion of a person’s behav­ior across a wide range of rel­e­vant cir­cum­stances,” as opposed to stud­ies which deal with

skepticism about moral character

The other day, my buddy Adam over at Sophist­pun­dit wrote about Char­ac­ter. I was not sur­prised that, being an econ­o­mist and some kind of Humean virtue ethi­cist, he thinks that moral­ity mostly con­cerns what kind of peo­ple we are, and that actions are sig­nals to other peo­ple, pro­vid­ing infor­ma­tion about what we’re like. Adam claims that