Aristotle would answer “‘should’ is said in many ways”. I was of course thinking of the normative ‘should’, which I believe is the first that comes to mind when someone asks about normative sentences. But I’d be highly interested in a different kind of counterexample: a normative sentence without a ‘should’ stated or implied.
That’s true, but that comment was only meant for you, who seemed confused about what kind of ‘should’ you should use in a normative sentence. I took for granted that you already knew ‘normative’, because you had posted a nice and useful answer to the original question.
Aristotle would answer “‘should’ is said in many ways”. I was of course thinking of the normative ‘should’, which I believe is the first that comes to mind when someone asks about normative sentences. But I’d be highly interested in a different kind of counterexample: a normative sentence without a ‘should’ stated or implied.
Defining a normative statement as ‘a statement with a normative “should”’ has certain problems...
That’s true, but that comment was only meant for you, who seemed confused about what kind of ‘should’ you should use in a normative sentence. I took for granted that you already knew ‘normative’, because you had posted a nice and useful answer to the original question.