What distinguishes the “Orthogonality thesis” from “Hume’s Guillotine”? If you’re looking for standard published arguments, I’d think you could start with “A Treatise of Human Nature” and proceed through the history of the “is-ought problem” from there.
What distinguishes the “Orthogonality thesis” from “Hume’s Guillotine”? If you’re looking for standard published arguments, I’d think you could start with “A Treatise of Human Nature” and proceed through the history of the “is-ought problem” from there.
Did you read the paper? It does cite Hume.
In fact, it spends most of it’s time arguing that Hume isn’t needed for the argument to work...
I did not yet; thank you for the link.