NYT
 
 
 
 
Why Our Children Don’t Think There Are  Moral Facts
 
By _Justin P. McBrayer_ 
(http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/author/justin-p-mcbrayer/)  
March 2, 2015 3:25 am March 2, 2015 3:25  am 
 
 
 




 
 
 
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George Washington, depicted here taking the oath of office in  1789, was 
the first president of the United States. Fact, opinion or  both?Credit via 
Associated  Press
What would you say if you found  out that our public schools were teaching 
children that it is not true that  it’s wrong to kill people for fun or 
cheat on tests? Would you be surprised? 
I was. As a philosopher, I  already knew that many college-aged students don
’t believe in moral facts. While  there are no national surveys quantifying 
this phenomenon, philosophy professors  with whom I have spoken suggest 
that the overwhelming majority of college  freshmen in their classrooms view 
moral claims as mere opinions that are not  true or are true only relative to 
a culture.  
 
 
A misleading distinction between fact and opinion is embedded in  the 
Common Core.  



What I didn’t know was where  this attitude came from. Given _the  presence 
of moral relativism in some academic circles_ 
(http://www.thenewamerican.com/culture/education/item/372-moral-relativism-and-the-crisis-of-contemporary-
education) , some people might  naturally assume that philosophers 
themselves are to blame. But they aren’t.  There are historical examples of 
philosophers who endorse a kind of moral  relativism, dating back at least to 
Protagoras who declared that “man is the  measure of all things,” and several 
who 
deny that there are any moral facts  whatsoever. But such creatures are 
rare. Besides, if students are already  showing up to college with this view of 
morality, it’s very unlikely that it’s  the result of what professional 
philosophers are teaching. So where is the view  coming from?
A few weeks ago, I learned that  students are exposed to this sort of 
thinking well before crossing the threshold  of higher education. When I went 
to 
visit my son’s second grade open house, I  found a troubling pair of signs 
hanging over the bulletin board. They read: 
Fact: Something that is true  about a subject and can be tested or proven. 
Opinion: What someone  thinks, feels, or believes. 
Hoping that this set of  definitions was a one-off mistake, I went home and 
Googled “fact vs. opinion.”  _The  definitions I found online_ 
(http://www.robeson.k12.nc.us/site/handlers/filedownload.ashx?moduleinstanceid=39850&dat
aid=53761&FileName=fact%20and%20opinion%20mini%20lesson.pdf)  were 
substantially the same as the one in my  son’s classroom. As it turns out, the 
Common Core standards used by a majority  of K-12 programs in the country 
require 
that students be able to “_distinguish among  fact, opinion, and reasoned 
judgment in a text_ (http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/RH/6-8/8/) .” 
And the Common Core  institute provides _a  helpful page full of links to 
definitions, lesson plans and quizzes_ 
(http://www.commoncorehistorysocialstudies6to8.com/rh6-88-distinguish-fact-opinion-and-reasoned-judgment.html)
  to  
ensure that students can tell the difference between facts and opinions. 
So what’s wrong with this  distinction and how does it undermine the view 
that there are objective moral  facts? 
First, the definition of a fact  waffles between truth and proof — two 
obviously different features. Things can  be true even if no one can prove 
them. 
For example, it could be true that there  is life elsewhere in the universe 
even though no one can prove it. Conversely,  many of the things we once “
proved” turned out to be false. For example, many  people once thought that 
the earth was flat. It’s a mistake to confuse truth (a  feature of the world) 
with proof (a feature of our mental lives). Furthermore,  if proof is 
required for facts, then facts become person-relative. Something  might be a 
fact 
for me if I can prove it but not a fact for you if you can’t. In  that 
case, E=MC2 is a fact for a physicist but not for me. 
But second, and worse, students  are taught that claims are either facts or 
opinions. They are given  quizzes in which they must sort claims into one 
camp or the other but not both.  But if a fact is something that is true and 
an opinion is something that is  believed, then many claims will obviously 
be both. For example, I asked my son  about this distinction after his open 
house. He confidently explained that facts  were things that were true 
whereas opinions are things that are believed. We  then had this conversation: 
Me: “I believe that George  Washington was the first president. Is that a 
fact or an opinion?” 
Him: “It’s a fact.” 
Me: “But I believe it, and you  said that what someone believes is an 
opinion.” 
Him: “Yeah, but it’s true.” 
Me: “So it’s both a fact  and an opinion?” 
The blank stare on his face said  it all. 
 
How does the dichotomy between fact and opinion relate to  morality? I 
learned the answer to this question only after I investigated my  son’s 
homework 
(_and  other examples of assignments online_ 
(http://www.sde.idaho.gov/site/social_studies/docs/core/Fact,%20Opinion,%20Reasoning.pdf)
 ). Kids are 
asked to sort facts from  opinions and, without fail, every value claim is 
labeled as an opinion.  Here’s a little test devised from questions available 
on 
_fact  vs. opinion worksheets_ 
(http://www.ereadingworksheets.com/free-reading-worksheets/fact-and-opinion-worksheets/)
  online: are the following facts 
or  opinions?


— Copying homework  assignments is wrong. 
— Cursing in school is  inappropriate behavior. 
— All men are created equal. 
— It is worth sacrificing some  personal liberties to protect our country 
from terrorism. 
— It is wrong for people under  the age of 21 to drink alcohol. 
— Vegetarians are healthier than  people who eat meat. 
— Drug dealers belong in  prison.
The answer? In each case, the  worksheets categorize these claims as 
opinions. The explanation on offer is that  each of these claims is a value 
claim 
and value claims are not facts. _This  is repeated ad nauseum_ 
(http://www.commoncorehistorysocialstudies6to8.com/rh6-88-distinguish-fact-opinion-and-rea
soned-judgment.html) : any claim with good, right, wrong, etc. is not a  
fact. 
In summary, our public schools  teach students that all claims are either 
facts or opinions and that all value  and moral claims fall into the latter 
camp. The punchline: there are no moral  facts. And if there are no moral 
facts, then there are no moral truths. 
The inconsistency in this  curriculum is obvious. For example, at the 
outset of the school year, my son  brought home a list of student rights and 
responsibilities. Had he already read  the lesson on fact vs. opinion, he might 
have noted that the supposed rights of  other students were based on no more 
than opinions. According to the school’s  curriculum, it certainly wasn’t 
true that his classmates deserved to be  treated a particular way — that 
would make it a fact. Similarly, it wasn’t  really true that he had any 
responsibilities — that would be to make a value  claim a truth. It should not 
be a 
surprise that there is _rampant  cheating on college campuses_ 
(http://www.bostonglobe.com/ideas/2013/08/03/how-college-classes-encourage-cheating/3Q34x
5ysYcplWNA3yO2eLK/story.html) : If we’ve taught our students for 12 years 
that  there is no fact of the matter as to whether cheating is wrong, we can’
t very  well blame them for doing so later on. 
Indeed, in the world beyond  grade school, where adults must exercise their 
moral knowledge and reasoning to  conduct themselves in the society, the 
stakes are greater. There, consistency  demands that we acknowledge the 
existence of moral facts. If it’s not true that  it’s wrong to murder a 
cartoonist with whom one disagrees, then how can we be  outraged? If there are 
no 
truths about what is good or valuable or right, how  can we prosecute people 
for crimes against humanity? If it’s not true that all  humans are created 
equal, then why vote for any political system that doesn’t  benefit you over 
others?


 
Our schools do amazing things  with our children. And they are, in a way, 
teaching moral standards when they  ask students to treat one another 
humanely and to do their schoolwork with  academic integrity. But at the same 
time, 
the curriculum sets our children up  for doublethink. They are told that 
there are no moral facts in one breath even  as the next tells them how they 
ought to behave. 
We can do better. Our children  deserve a consistent intellectual 
foundation. Facts are things that are true.  Opinions are things we believe. 
Some of 
our beliefs are true. Others are not.  Some of our beliefs are backed by 
evidence. Others are not. Value claims are  like any other claims: either true 
or false, evidenced or not. The hard work  lies not in recognizing that at 
least some moral claims are true but in  carefully thinking through our 
evidence for which of the many competing moral  claims is correct. That’s a 
hard 
thing to do. But we can’t sidestep the  responsibilities that come with 
being human just because it’s hard. 
That would be  wrong.

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