I’m a pretty strong anti-realist but this is one of the strongest types of shoulds for me. I.e. ‘If you want to achieve the best consequences, then you should expect the majority of affectable consequences to be in the far future’ Seems like the kind of thing that could be true or false on non-normative grounds, and would normatively ground a ‘should’ if you are already committed to consequentialism. In the sense that believing “I should get to Rome as fast as possible” and “The fastest way to get to Rome is to take a flight” grounds a ‘should’ for “I should take a flight to Rome”.
I’m a pretty strong anti-realist but this is one of the strongest types of shoulds for me.
I.e. ‘If you want to achieve the best consequences, then you should expect the majority of affectable consequences to be in the far future’ Seems like the kind of thing that could be true or false on non-normative grounds, and would normatively ground a ‘should’ if you are already committed to consequentialism. In the sense that believing “I should get to Rome as fast as possible” and “The fastest way to get to Rome is to take a flight” grounds a ‘should’ for “I should take a flight to Rome”.