Covering moral intuition, self-evidence, non-inferentiality, moral emotion, and seeming states, Hossein Dabbagh defends the epistemology of moral intuitionism. His line of analysis resists the empirical challenges derived from empirical moral psychology and reveals the seeming-based account of moral intuitionism as the only tenable one. Expanding the literature on the seeming account of moral intuition and intuitionism, Dabbagh redefines all elements of moral intuitionism. The Moral Epistemology of Intuitionism combines epistemological intuitionism with work in neuroethics to develop an account of the role that moral intuition and emotion play in moral judgment. Culminating in a convincing argument about the value of understanding moral intuitionism in terms of intellectual seeming and perceptual experience.
The Moral Epistemology of Intuitionism : Neuroethics and Seeming States