Richard Joyce
Moral Fictionalism and Religious Fictionalism
Edited by Richard Joyce & Stuart Brock
Oxford University Press, 2023
The cover image is Apparition (c.1905) by Odilon Redon.
More information on this book will be posted here once it is published. In the meantime, below is an abstract and the table of contents.
Abstract:
Atheism is a familiar kind of skepticism about religion. Moral error theory is an analogous kind of skepticism about morality, though less well known outside academic circles. Both kinds of skeptic face a “what next?” question: If we have decided that the subject matter (religion/morality) is mistaken, then what should we do with this way of talking and thinking? The natural assumption is that we should abolish the mistaken topic, just as we previously eliminated talk of, say, bodily humors and unicorns. The fictionalist, however, offers a less obvious recommendation. According to the fictionalist, engaging in the topic in question provides pragmatic benefits that do not depend on its truth — similar in some respects to the way we engage with a novel or a movie. The religious fictionalist maintains that even if we were atheists, we should carry on talking, thinking, and acting as if religion were true. The moral fictionalist maintains a similar view regarding moral talk, thought, and action.
Both forms of fictionalism face serious challenges. Some challenges can be leveled at either form of fictionalism (or at any form of fictionalism), whereas others are problems unique to moral fictionalism or to religious fictionalism. There are important questions to be asked about the relationship between these two kinds of fictionalism. Could moral fictionalism be plausible even if religious fictionalism is not (or vice versa)? This is a volume of thirteen previously unpublished papers on the topics of religious fictionalism, moral fictionalism, and the relation between these views.
Table of contents:
Introduction. “Fictionalism: Moral, religious, hermeneutic, revolutionary”
Richard Joyce
1. “Reasons for pretending and pretend reasons”
James Lenman
2. “Should moral error theorists make do with make-believe?”
Jessica Isserow
3. “Moral fictionalism: How and why?”
Victor Moberger & Jonas Olson
4. “Moral fictionalism and misleading analogies”
François Jaquet
5. “Religious fictionalism”
Graham Oppy
6. “The pretensions of religious fictionalism”
Bradley Armour-Garb & Frederick Kroon
7. “Is the Pope Catholic? Religious fictionalism and the hazards of belief”
Mary Leng
8. “Religious fictionalism: Strategies and obstacles”
Michael Scott
9. “The contours of religious fictionalism”
Natalja Deng
10. “Should moral fictionalists be religious fictionalists (or vice versa)?”
Robin Le Poidevin
11. “Do we have reason to adopt religious fictionalism or moral fictionalism?”
Seahwa Kim
12. “Revolutionary moral fictionalism and the problem of imaginative failure”
Stuart Brock
13. “Yes to moral fictionalism; no to religious fictionalism”
Richard Joyce [pdf available here]