By “Then we can confidently say” I just meant “Assuming we accept the above analysis of morality, then we can confidently say…”. I am not sure I accept it myself; I proposed it as a way one could believe that normative questions have objective answers without straying as far form the general LW worldview as being a Roman Catholic.
By the way, the metaethical analysis I outlined does not require that people think consciously of something like CEV whenever they use the word “good”. It is a proposed explication in the Carnapian sense of the folk concept of “good” in the same way that, say, VNM utility theory is an explication of “rational”.
By “Then we can confidently say” I just meant “Assuming we accept the above analysis of morality, then we can confidently say…”. I am not sure I accept it myself; I proposed it as a way one could believe that normative questions have objective answers without straying as far form the general LW worldview as being a Roman Catholic.
By the way, the metaethical analysis I outlined does not require that people think consciously of something like CEV whenever they use the word “good”. It is a proposed explication in the Carnapian sense of the folk concept of “good” in the same way that, say, VNM utility theory is an explication of “rational”.