You might enjoy Nozick’s Invariances which takes a similar approach to the Is-Ought problem in claiming that the ontological assumptions of the problem as stated are incoherent. We don’t have firm Is’s and firm Oughts we need to bridge. We already are the bridge (of theseus) one end of which is built from heuristics that return Is-like answers, and one end of which is built from heuristics that return Ought-like answers.
I believe Nozick was partially responding to The View from Nowhere.
You might enjoy Nozick’s Invariances which takes a similar approach to the Is-Ought problem in claiming that the ontological assumptions of the problem as stated are incoherent. We don’t have firm Is’s and firm Oughts we need to bridge. We already are the bridge (of theseus) one end of which is built from heuristics that return Is-like answers, and one end of which is built from heuristics that return Ought-like answers.
I believe Nozick was partially responding to The View from Nowhere.
That sounds like a good response to the Is-Ought problem.